181.000
Documents of authority
(a) There shall be a duly constituted authority and governance structure for assuring legal responsibility and for requiring accountability for performance and operation of the Acute Crisis Unit.
(b) The governing authority shall have written documents of its source of authority, which shall be available to the public upon request.
(c) The governing body's bylaws, rules or regulations shall identify the chief executive officer who is responsible for the overall day-to-day operation of the Acute Crisis Unit, including the control, utilization and conservation of its physical and financial assets and the recruitment and direction of the staff.
(1) The source of authority document shall state:
(A) The eligibility criteria for governing body membership;
(B) The number and types of membership
(C) The method of selecting members;
(D) The number of members necessary for a quorum;
(E) Attendance requirements for governing body membership;
(F) The duration of appointment or election for governing body members and officers.
(G) The powers and duties of the governing body and its officers and committees or the authority and responsibilities of any person legally designated to function as the governing body.
(2) There shall be an organizational chart setting forth the structure of the organization.
Behavioral Health Agency Certification Manual
I.
PURPOSE:
A. To assure that Outpatient Behavioral Health Services ("OBHS") care and services provided by certified Behavioral Health Agencies comply with applicable laws, which require, among other things, that all care reimbursed by the Arkansas Medical Assistance Program ("Medicaid") must be provided efficiently, economically, only when medically necessary, and is of a quality that meets professionally recognized standards of health care.
B. The requirements and obligations imposed by §§ I-XIII of this rule are substantive, not procedural.
II.
SCOPE:
A. Current Behavioral Health Agency certification under this policy is a condition of Medicaid provider enrollment.
B. Department of Human Services ("DHS") Behavioral Health Agency certification must be obtained for each site before application for Medicaid provider enrollment. An applicant may submit one application for multiple sites, but DHS will review each site separately and take separate certification action for each site.
III.
DEFINITIONS:
A. "50 mile radius" means 50 miles from a certified site by driving distance. Driving distance is calculated by a method of utilizing a standardized mapping application.
B. "Accreditation" means full accreditation (preliminary, expedited, probationary,
pending, conditional, deferred or provisional accreditations will not be accepted) as an outpatient behavioral health care provider issued by at least one of the following:
. Commission on Accreditation for Rehabilitative Facilities (CARF) Behavioral Health Standards Manual
. The Joint Commission (TJC) Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Behavioral Health Care
. Council on Accreditation (COA) Outpatient Mental Health Services Manual
Accreditation timing for specific programs is defined in the applicable DHS Certification manual for that program.
C. "Adverse license action" means any action by a licensing authority that is related to client care, any act or omission warranting exclusion under DHS Policy 1088, or that imposes any restriction on the licensee's practice privileges. The action is deemed to exist when the licensing entity imposes the adverse action except as provided in Ark. Code Ann. §
25-15-211(c).
D. "Applicant" means an outpatient behavioral health care agency that is seeking DHS certification as a Behavioral Health Agency.
E. "Certification" means a written designation, issued by DHS, declaring that the provider has demonstrated compliance as declared within and defined by this rule.
F. "Client" means any person for whom a Behavioral Health Agency furnishes, or has agreed or undertaken to furnish, Outpatient Behavioral Health services.
G. "Client Information System" means a comprehensive, integrated system of clinical, administrative, and financial records that provides information necessary and useful to deliver client services. Information may be maintained electronically, in hard copy, or both.
H. "Compliance" means conformance with:
1. Applicable state and federal laws, rules, and regulations including, without limitation:
a. Titles XIX and XXI of the Social Security Act and implementing regulations;
b. Other federal laws and regulations governing the delivery of health care funded in whole or in part by federal funds, for example, 42 U.S.C. §
1320c-5;
c. All state laws and rules applicable to Medicaid generally and to Outpatient Behavioral Health services specifically;
d. Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as amended, and implementing regulations;
e. The Americans With Disabilities Act, as amended, and implementing regulations;
f. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act ("HIPAA"), as amended and implementing regulations.
2. Accreditation standards and requirements.
I. "Contemporaneous" means by the end of the performing provider's first work period following the provision of care of services to be documented, or as provided in the Outpatient Behavioral Health Services manual, whichever is longer.
J. "Coordinated Management Plan" means a plan that the provider develops and carries out to assure compliance and quality improvement.
K. "Corrective Action Plan" (CAP) means a document that describes both short- term remedial steps to achieve compliance and permanent practices and procedures to sustain compliance.
L. "Covered Health Care Practitioner" means: Any practitioner providing Outpatient Behavioral Health Services that is allowable to be reimbursed pursuant to the Outpatient Behavioral Health Services Medicaid Manual.
M. "Cultural Competency" means the ability to communicate and interact effectively with people of different cultures, including people with disabilities and atypical lifestyles. N. "Deficiency" means an item or area of noncompliance.
O. "DHS" means the Arkansas Department of Human Services.
P. "Emergency Behavioral Health Agency services" means nonscheduled Behavioral Health Agency services delivered under circumstances where a prudent layperson with an average knowledge of behavioral health care would reasonably believe that Behavioral Health Agency services are immediately necessary to prevent death or serious impairment of health.
Q. "Medical Director" means a physician that oversees the planning and delivery of all Behavioral Health Agency services delivered by the provider.
R. "Mental health professional" or "MHP" means a person who possesses an Arkansas license to provide clinical behavioral health care. The license must be in good standing and not subject to any adverse license action.
S. "Mobile care" means a face-to-face intervention with the client at a place other than a certified site operated by the provider. Mobile care must be:
1. Either clinically indicated in an emergent situation or necessary for the client to have access to care in accordance with the care plan;
2. Delivered in a clinically appropriate setting; and
3. Delivered where Medicaid billing is permitted if delivered to a Medicaid eligible client.
Mobile care may include medically necessary behavioral health care provided in a school that is within a fifty (50) mile radius of a certified site operated by the provider.
T. "Multi-disciplinary team" means a group of professionals from different disciplines that provide comprehensive care through individual expertise and in consultation with one another to accomplish the client's clinical goals. Multi- disciplinary teams promote coordination between agencies; provide a "checks and balances" mechanism to ensure that the interests and rights of all concerned parties are addressed; and identify service gaps and breakdowns in coordination or communication between agencies or individuals.
U. "NPDB" means the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration National Provider Data Bank.
V. "Performing provider" means the individual who personally delivers a care or service directly to a client.
W. "Professionally recognized standard of care" means that degree of skill and learning commonly applied under all the circumstances in the community by the average prudent reputable member of the profession. Conformity with Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) evidence-based practice models is evidence of compliance with professionally recognized standards of care.
X. "Provider" means an entity that is certified by DHS and enrolled by DMS as a Behavioral Health Agency
Y. "Qualified Behavioral Health Provider" means a person who:
1. Does not possess an Arkansas license to provide clinical behavioral health care;
2. Works under the direct supervision of a mental health professional;
3. Has successfully completed prescribed and documented courses of initial and annual training sufficient to perform all tasks assigned by a mental health professional;
4. Acknowledges in writing that all mental health paraprofessional services are controlled by client care plans and provided under the direct supervision of a mental health professional.
Z. "Quality assurance (QA) meeting" means a meeting held at least quarterly for systematic monitoring and evaluation of clinic services and compliance. See also, Medicaid Outpatient Behavioral Health Services Manual, § 212.000.
AA. "Reviewer" means a person employed or engaged by:
1. DHS or a division or office thereof;
2. An entity that contracts with DHS or a division or office thereof.
BB. "Site" means a distinct place of business dedicated to the delivery of Outpatient Behavioral Health Services within a fifty (50) mile radius. Each site must be a bona fide Behavioral Health Agency, meaning a behavioral health outpatient clinic providing all the services specified in this rule and the Medicaid Outpatient Behavioral Health Services Manual. Sites may not be adjuncts to a different activity such as a school, a day care facility, a long-term care facility, or the office or clinic of a physician or psychologist.
CC. "Site relocation" means closing an existing site and opening a new site no more than a fifty (50) mile radius from the original site.
DD. "Site transfer" means moving existing staff, program, and clients from one physical location to a second location that is no more than a fifty (50) mile radius from the original site.
EE. "Supervise" as used in this rule means to direct, inspect, observe, and evaluate performance.
FF. "Supervision documentation" means written records of the time, date, subject(s), and duration of supervisory contact maintained in the provider's official records.
IV.
COMPLIANCE TIMELINE:
A. Entities currently certified as Rehabilitative Services for Persons with Mental Illness (RSPMI) providers will be grandfathered in as certified Behavioral Health Agencies. Current RSPMI agency recertification procedures are based upon national accreditation timelines. Behavioral Health Agency recertification will also be based upon national accreditation timelines.
B. All entities in operation as of the effective date of this rule must comply with this rule within forty-five (45) calendar days in order to maintain certification.
C. DHS may authorize temporary compliance exceptions for new accreditation standards that require independent site surveys and specific service subset accreditations. Such compliance exceptions expire at the end of the provider's accreditation cycle and may not be renewed or reauthorized.
V.
APPLICATION FOR DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY CERTIFICATION:
A. New Behavioral Health Agency applicants must complete DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY CERTIFICATION Form 100, DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY FORM 200, and DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 210
B. DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY CERTIFICATION Form 100, DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY FORM 200, and DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 210 can be found at the following website:
www.arkansas.gov/dhs/dhs
C. Applicants must submit the completed application forms and all required attachments for each proposed site to:
Department of Human Services
Division of Behavioral Health Services
Attn. Certification Office
305 S. Palm
Little Rock, AR 72205
D. Each applicant must be an outpatient behavioral health care agency:
1. Whose primary purpose is the delivery of a continuum of outpatient behavioral health services in a free standing independent clinic;
2. That is independent of any DHS certified Behavioral Health Agency.
E. Behavioral Health Agency certification is not transferable or assignable.
F. The privileges of a Behavioral Health Agency certification are limited to the certified site.
G. Providers may file Medicaid claims only for Outpatient Behavioral Health Services delivered by a performing provider engaged by the provider.
H. Applications must be made in the name used to identify the business entity to the Secretary of State and for tax purposes.
I. Applicants must maintain and document accreditation, and must prominently display certification of accreditation issued by the accrediting organization in a public area at each site. Accreditation must recognize and include all the applicant's Behavioral Health Agency programs, services, and sites.
1. Initial accreditation must include an on-site survey for each service site for which provider certification is requested. Accreditation documentation submitted to DHS must list all sites recognized and approved by the accrediting organization as the applicant's service sites.
2. Accreditation documentation must include the applicant's governance standards for operation and sufficiently define and describe all services or types of care (customer service units or service standards) the applicant intends to provide including, without limitation, crisis intervention/stabilization, in-home family counseling, outpatient treatment, day treatment, therapeutic foster care, intensive outpatient, medication management/pharmacotherapy.
3. Any outpatient behavioral health program associated with a hospital must have a free-standing behavioral health outpatient program national accreditation.
J. The applicant must attach the entity's family involvement policy to each application.
VI.
APPLICATION REVIEW PROCESS:
A. Timeline:
1. DHS will review Behavioral Health Agency application forms and materials within ninety (90) calendar days after DHS receives a complete application package. (DHS will return incomplete applications to senders without review.)
2. For approved applications, a site survey will be scheduled within forty-five (45) calendar days of the approval date.
3. DHS will mail a survey report to the applicant within twenty-five (25) calendar days of the site visit. Providers having deficiencies on survey reports must submit an approvable corrective action plan to DHS within thirty-five (35) calendar days after the date of a survey report.
4. DHS will accept or reject each corrective action plan in writing within twenty (20) calendar days after receipt.
5. Within thirty (30) calendar days after DHS approves a corrective action plan, the applicant must document implementation of the plan and correction of the deficiencies listed in the survey report. Applicants who are unable, despite the exercise of reasonable diligence, to correct deficiencies within the time permitted may obtain up to ten (10) additional days based on a showing of good cause.
6. DHS will furnish site-specific certificates via postal or electronic mail within ten (10) calendar days of issuing a site certification.
B. Survey Components: An outline of site survey components is available on the DHS website:
www.arkansas.gov/dhs/dhs and is located in appendix # 7.
C. Determinations:
1. Application approved.
2. Application returned for additional information.
3. Application denied. DHS will state the reasons for denial in a written response to the applicant.
VII.
DHS Access to Applicants/Providers:
A. DHS may contact applicants and providers at any time;
B. DHS may make unannounced visits to applicants/providers.
C. Applicants/providers shall provide DHS prompt direct access to applicant/provider documents and to applicant/provider staff and contractors, including, without limitation, clinicians, paraprofessionals, physicians, administrative, and support staff.
D. DHS reserves the right to ask any questions or request any additional information related to certification, accreditation, or both.
VIII.
ADDITIONAL CERTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS:
A. Care and Services must:
1. Comply with all state and federal laws, rules, and regulations applicable to the furnishing of health care funded in whole or in part by federal funds; to all state laws and policies applicable to Arkansas Medicaid generally, and to Outpatient Behavioral Health Services specifically, and to all applicable Department of Human Services ("DHS") policies including, without limitation, DHS Participant Exclusion Policy § 1088.0.0. The Participant Exclusion Policy is available online at
https://dhsshare.arkansas.gov/DHS%20Policies/Forms/By%20Policy.aspx
2. Conform to professionally recognized behavioral health rehabilitative treatment models.
3. Be established by contemporaneous documentation that is accurate and demonstrates compliance. Documentation will be deemed to be contemporaneous if recorded by the end of the performing provider's first work period following the provision of the care or services to be documented, or as provided in the Outpatient
Behavioral Health Services manual, § 252.110, whichever is longer.
B. Applicants and Behavioral Health Agencies must:
1. Be a legal entity in good standing;
2. Maintain all required business licenses;
3. Adopt a mission statement to establish goals and guide activities;
4. Maintain a current organizational chart that identifies administrative and clinical chains of command.
C. Applicants/providers must establish and comply with operating policy that at a minimum implements credible practices and standards for:
1. Compliance;
2. Cultural competence;
3. Provision of services, including referral services, for clients that are indigent, have no source of third party payment, or both, including:
a. Procedures to follow when a client is rejected for lack of a third-party payment source or when a client is discharged for nonpayment of care.
b. Coordinated referral plans for clients that the provider lacks the capacity to provide medically necessary Outpatient Behavioral Health Services. Coordinated referral plans must:
1) Identify in the client record the medically necessary Outpatient Behavioral Health Services that the provider cannot or will not furnish;
2) State the reason(s) in the client record that the provider cannot or will not furnish the care;
3) Provide quality-control processes that assure compliance with care, discharge, and transition plans.
IX.
STAFFING REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTIFICATION
A. At a minimum, Behavioral Health Agency staffing shall be sufficient to establish and implement services for each Behavioral Health Agency client, and must include the following:
1.
Chief Executive Officer/Executive Director (or functional equivalent) (full-time position or full-time equivalent positions): The person or persons identified to carry out CEO/ED functions:
a. Is/are ultimately responsible for applicant/provider organization, staffing, policies and practices, and Behavioral Health Agency service delivery;
b. Must possess a master's degree in behavioral health care, management, or a related field and experience, and meet any additional qualifications required by the provider's governing body. Other job- related education, experience, or both, may be substituted for all or part of these requirements upon approval of the provider's governing body.
2.
Clinical Director (or functional equivalent) (full-time position or full-time equivalent positions)
: The person or persons identified to carry out clinical director functions must:
a. Report directly to the CEO/ED;
b. Be the DHS contact for clinical and practice-related issues;
c. Be accountable for all clinical services (professional and paraprofessional);
d. Be responsible for Behavioral Health Agency care and service quality and compliance;
e. Assure that all services are provided within each practitioner's scope of practice under Arkansas law and under such supervision as required by law for practitioners not licensed to practice independently;
f. Assure and document in the provider's official records the direct supervision of MHP's, either personally or through a documented chain of supervision.
g. Assure that licensed mental health professionals directly supervise Qualified Behavioral Health Providers. Direct supervision ratios must not exceed one licensed mental health professional to ten (10) Qualified Behavioral Health Providers;
h. Possess independent Behavioral Health licensure in Arkansas as a Licensed Psychologist, Licensed Certified Social Worker, (LCSW), Licensed Psychological Examiner - Independent (LPE-I), Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC), Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT), or an Advanced Practice Nurse or Clinical Nurse Specialist (APN or CNS) with a specialty in psychiatry or mental health and a minimum of two years clinical experience post master's degree.
3.
Mental Health Professionals (Independently Licensed Clinicians, Non-Independently Licensed Clinicians):
a. MHP's may:
1) Provide direct behavioral health care;
2) Delegate and oversee work assignments of Qualified Behavioral Health Provider's;
3) Delegate and oversee work assignments of Certified Peer Specialists, Certified Youth Support Specialists, and Certified Family Support
Partners
4) Ensure compliance and conformity to the provider's policies and procedures;
5) Provide direct supervision of Qualified Behavioral Health Provider's;
6) Provider direct supervision of Certified Peer Specialists, Certified Youth Support Specialists, and Certified Family Support Partners
7) Provide case consultation and in-service training;
8) Observe and evaluate performance of Qualified Behavioral Health Provider's.
9) Observe and evaluate performance of Certified Peer Specialists, Certified Youth Support Specialists, and Certified Family Support Partners
b. MHP Supervision:
1) Communication between an MHP and the MHP's supervisor must include each of the following at least every twelve (12) months:
a) Assessment and referral skills, including the accuracy of assessments;
b) Appropriateness of treatment or service interventions in relation to the client needs;
c) Treatment/intervention effectiveness as reflected by the client meeting individual goals;
d) Issues of ethics, legal aspects of clinical practice, and professional standards;
e) The provision of feedback that enhances the skills of direct service personnel;
f) Clinical documentation issues identified through ongoing compliance review;
g) Cultural competency issues;
h) All areas noted as deficient or needing improvement.
2) Documented client-specific face-to-face and other necessary communication regarding client care must occur between each MHP's supervisor and the MHP periodically (no less than every ninety (90) calendar days) in accordance with a schedule maintained in the provider's official records.
4.
Qualified Behavioral Health Providers (Including Certified Peer Support Specialist, Certified Youth Support Specialist, Certified Family Support Partners):
a. Are MHP service extenders;
b. Qualified Behavioral Health Provider supervision must conform to the requirements for MHP supervision (See § IX (3)(b)) except that all requirements must be met every six (6) months, and one or more licensed health care professional(s) acting within the scope of his or her practice must have a face-to-face contact with each Qualified Behavioral Health Provider for the purpose of clinical supervision at least every fourteen (14) days, must have at least twelve (12) such face-to-face contacts every ninety (90) days, and such additional face-to-face contacts as are necessary in response to a client's unscheduled care needs, response or lack of response to treatment, or change of condition;
c. Providers must establish that Qualified Behavioral Health Provider supervision occurred via individualized written certifications created by a licensed mental health professional and filed in the provider's official records on a weekly basis, certifying:
1) That the licensed mental health professional periodically (in accordance with a schedule tailored to the client's condition and care needs and previously recorded in the provider's official records) communicated individualized client-specific instructions to the mental health paraprofessional describing the manner and methods for the delivery of paraprofessional services;
2) That the licensed mental health professional periodically (in accordance with a schedule tailored to the client's condition and care needs and previously recorded in the provider's official records, but no less than every 30 days) personally observed the mental health paraprofessional delivering services to a client; that the observations were of sufficient duration to declare whether paraprofessional services complied with the licensed mental health professional's instructions;
3) The date, time, and duration of each supervisory communication with and observation of a mental health paraprofessional.
5.
Corporate Compliance Officer:
a. Manages policy, practice standards and compliance, except compliance that is the responsibility of the medical records librarian;
b. Reports directly to the CEO/ED (except in circumstances where the compliance officer is required to report directly to a director, the board of directors, or an accrediting or oversight agency);
c. Has no direct responsibility for billings or collections;
d. Is the DHS and Medicaid contact for DHS certification, Medicaid enrollment, and compliance.
6.
Medical Director:
a. Oversees Behavioral Health Agency care planning, coordination, and delivery, and specifically:
1) Diagnoses, treats, and prescribes for behavioral illness;
2) Is responsible and accountable for all client care, care planning, care coordination, and medication storage;
3) Assures that physician care is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week;
4) May delegate client care to other physicians, subject to documented oversight and approval;
5) Assures that a physician participates in treatment planning and reviews;
6) If the medical director is not a psychiatrist, a psychiatrist certified by one of the specialties of the American Board of Medical Specialties must serve as a consultant to the medical director and to other staff, both medical and non-medical. If the provider serves clients under the age of twenty-one (21), the medical director shall have access to a board certified child psychiatrist, for example, through the Psychiatric Research Institute child/Adolescent Telephone Consultation Service;
7) Medical director services may be acquired by contract.
b. If the medical director is not a psychiatrist then the medical director shall contact a consulting psychiatrist within twenty-four (24) hours in the following situations:
1) When antipsychotic or stimulant medications are used in dosages higher than recommended in guidelines published by the Arkansas Department of Human Services Division of Medical Services;
2) When two (2) or more medications from the same pharmacological class are used;
3) When there is significant clinical deterioration or crisis with enhanced risk of danger to self or others.
c. The consulting psychiatrist(s) shall participate in quarterly quality assurance meetings.
7.
Privacy Officer: Develops and implements policies to assure compliance with privacy laws, regulations, and rules. Applicants/providers may assign privacy responsibilities to the Corporate Compliance Officer, Grievance Officer, or Medical Records Librarian, but not the CEO/ED.
8.
Quality Control Manager: Chairs the quality assurance committee and develops and implements quality control and quality improvement activities. Applicants/providers may assign quality control manager responsibilities to the Corporate Compliance Officer or Medical Records Manager, but not the CEO/ED.
9.
Grievance Officer:
a. Develops and implements the applicant's/provider's employee and client grievance procedures.
b. Effectively communicates grievance procedures to staff, contractors, prospective clients, and clients. Communications to clients who are legally incapacitated shall include communication to the client's responsible party.
c. The grievance officer shall not have any duties that may cause him/her to favor or disfavor any grievant.
10.
Medical Records Librarian:
a. Must be qualified by education, training, and experience to understand and apply:
1) Medical and behavioral health terminology and usages covering the full range of services offered by the provider;
2) Medical records forms and formats;
3) Medical records classification systems and references such as The American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual - IV-TR (DSM-IV-TR) and subsequent editions, International Classification of Diseases (ICD), Diagnostic Related Groups (DRG's), Physician's Desk Reference (PDR), Current Procedural Terminology (CPT), medical dictionaries, manuals, textbooks, and glossaries.
4) Legal and regulatory requirements of medical records to assure the record is acceptable as a legal document;
5) Laws and regulations on the confidentiality of medical records (Privacy Act and Freedom of Information Act) and the procedures for informed consent for release of information from the record.
6) The interrelationship of record services with the rest of the facility's services.
b. Develops and implements:
1) The client information system;
2) Operating methods and procedures covering all medical records functions.
3) Insures that the medical record is complete, accurate, and compliant.
11.
Licensed Psychologist, Licensed Psychological Examiner (LPE), or Licensed Psychological Examiner - Independent (LPE-I):
a. Provides psychological evaluations;
b. Each licensed psychological examiner or licensed psychological examiner-I must have supervision agreements with a doctoral psychologist to provide appropriate supervision or services for any evaluations or procedures that are required under or are outside the psychological examiner's scope of independent practice. Documentation of such agreements and of all required supervision and other practice arrangements must be included in the psychological examiner's personnel record;
c. Services may be acquired by contract.
B. Multidisciplinary Team(s): Any client identified as Tier 2 by the independent assessment shall be assigned a multidisciplinary team that includes professionals and qualified behavioral health providers as necessary to ensure coordination of each client's Outpatient Behavioral Health Services. All Tier 2 clients require the development of a Master Treatment Plan with ongoing reviews at least every one-hundred and eighty (180) calendar days.
For clients not eligible for Rehabilitative (Tier 2) Level or Intensive (Tier 3) Level services, he services offered in the Counseling Level (Tier 1) are a limited array of counseling services provided by a master's level clinician. Establishment of goals and a plan to reach those goals is part of good clinical practice and can be developed with the client during the Mental Health Diagnostic Assessment and Interpretation of Diagnosis. Clinicians should assess client's response to treatment at each session which should include a review of progress towards mutually agreed upon goals.
C. Quality Assurance Meetings:
Each provider must hold a quarterly quality assurance meeting.
D. Health Care Professional Notification/Disqualification:
1. Notice of covered health care practitioners:
a. Within twenty (20) days of the effective date of this rule, applicants/providers must notify the Office of Medicaid Inspector General (OMIG) of the names of covered health care practitioners who are providing Outpatient Behavioral Health Services.
b. On or before the tenth day of each month, providers must notify the Office of Medicaid Inspector General (OMIG) of the names of all covered health care practitioners who are providing Outpatient Behavioral Health Services and whose names were not previously disclosed.
2. Licensed health care professionals may not furnish Outpatient Behavioral Health Services during any time the professional's license is subject to adverse license action.
3. Applicants/providers may not employ/engage a covered health care practitioner after learning that the practitioner:
a. Is excluded from Medicare, Medicaid, or both;
b. Is debarred under Ark. Code Ann. §
19-11-245;
c. Is excluded under DHS Policy 1088; or d. Was subject to a final determination that the provider failed to comply with professionally recognized standards of care, conduct, or both. For purposes of this subsection, "final determination" means a final court or administrative adjudication, or the result of an alternative dispute resolution process such as arbitration or mediation.
E. Applicants/providers must maintain documentation identifying the primary work location of all mental health professionals and qualified behavioral health providers providing services on behalf of the Behavioral Health Agency.
F. Providers must maintain copies of disclosure forms signed by the client, or by the client's parent or guardian before Outpatient Behavioral Health Services are delivered except in emergencies. Such forms must at a minimum:
1. Disclose that the services to be provided are Outpatient Behavioral Health Services;
2. Explain Outpatient Behavioral Health Services eligibility, SED and SMI criteria;
3. Contain a brief description of the Behavioral Health Agency services;
4. Explain that all Outpatient Behavioral Health Services care must be medically necessary;
5. Disclose that third party (e.g., Medicaid or insurance) Outpatient Behavioral Health Service payments may be denied based on the third party payer's policies or rules;
6. Identify and define any services to be offered or provided in addition to those offered by the Behavioral Health Agency, state whether there will be a charge for such services, and if so, document payment arrangements;
7. Notify that services may be discontinued by the client at any time;
8. Offer to provide copies of Behavioral Health Agency and Outpatient Behavioral Health Services rules;
9. Provide and explain contact information for making complaints to the provider regarding care delivery, discrimination, or any other dissatisfaction with care provided by the Behavioral Health Agency;
10. Provide and explain contact information for making complaints to state and federal agencies that enforce compliance under § III(G)(1).
G. Outpatient Behavioral Health Services maintained at each site must include:
1. Psychiatric Evaluation and Medication Management;
2. Outpatient Services, including individual and family therapy at a minimum;
3. Crisis Services.
L. Providers must tailor all Outpatient Behavioral Health Services care to individual client need. If client records contain entries that are materially identical, DHS and the Division of Medical Services will, by rebuttable presumption, that this requirement is not met.
M. Outpatient Behavioral Health Services for individuals under age eighteen (18): Providers must establish and implement policies for family identification and engagement in treatment for persons under age eighteen (18), including strategies for identifying and overcoming barriers to family involvement.
N. Emergency Response Services: Applicants/providers must establish, implement, and maintain a site-specific emergency response plan, which must include:
1. A 24-hour emergency telephone number;
2. The applicant/provider must:
a. Provide the 24-hour emergency telephone number to all clients;
b. Post the 24-hour emergency number on all public entries to each site;
c. Include the 24-hour emergency phone number on answering machine greetings;
d. Identify local law enforcement and medical facilities within a 50-mile radius that may be emergency responders to client emergencies.
3. Direct access to a mental health professional within fifteen (15) minutes of an emergency/crisis call and face-to-face crisis assessment within two (2) hours;
4. Response strategies based upon:
a. Time and place of occurrence;
b. Individual's status (client/non-client);
c. Contact source (family, law enforcement, health care provider, etc.).
5. Requirements for a face-to-face response to requests for emergency intervention received from a hospital or law enforcement agency regarding a current client.
6. All face-to-face emergency responses shall be:
a. Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week;
b. Made by a mental health professional within two (2) hours of request (unless a different time frame is within clinical standards guidelines and mutually agreed upon by the requesting party and the MHP responding to the call).
7. Emergency services training requirements to ensure that emergency service are age-appropriate and comply with accreditation requirements. Providers shall maintain documentation of all emergency service training in each trainee's personnel file.
8. Requirements for clinical review by the clinical supervisor or emergency services director within 24 hours of each after-hours emergency intervention with such additional reporting as may be required by the provider's policy.
9. Requirements for documentation of all crisis calls, responses, collaborations, and outcomes;
10. Requirements that emergency responses not vary based on the client's funding source. If a client is eligible for inpatient behavioral health care funded through the community mental health centers and the provider is not a community mental health center with access to these funds, the provider must:
a. Determine whether the safest, least restrictive alternative is psychiatric hospitalization; and
b. Contact the appropriate community mental health center (CMHC) for consult and to request the CMHC to access local acute care funds for those over 21.
O. Each applicant/provider must establish and maintain procedures, competence, and capacity:
1. For assessment and individualized care planning and delivery;
2. For discharge planning integral to treatment;
3. For mobile care;
4. To assure that each mental health professional makes timely clinical disposition decisions;
5. To make timely referrals to other services;
6. To refer for inpatient services or less restrictive alternative;
7. To identify clients who need direct access to clinical staff, and to promptly provide such access.
P. Each applicant/provider must establish, maintain, and document a quality improvement program, to include:
1. Evidence based practices;
2. Use of agency wide outcomes measures to improve both client care and clinical practice that are approved by the agency's national accrediting organization. The following must be documented:
a. Measured outcomes
b. Sample report
c. Collection of outcomes, beginning at the initial mental health diagnosis service, which would be completed very close to the client's intake.
3. Requirements for informing all clients and clients' responsible parties of the client's rights while accessing services.
4. Regular (at least quarterly) quality assurance meetings that include:
a. Clinical Record Reviews: medical record reviews of a minimum number of randomly selected charts. The minimum number is the lesser of a statistically valid sample yielding 95% confidence with a 5% margin of error; or 10% of all charts open at any time during the past three (3) months;
b. Program and services reviews that:
1) Assess and document whether care and services meet client needs;
2) Identify unmet behavioral health needs;
3) Establish and implement plans to address unmet needs.
X.
HOME OFFICE:
A. Each provider must maintain and identify a home office in the State of Arkansas;
B. The home office may be located at a site or may be solely an administrative office not requiring site certification;
C. The home office is solely responsible for governance and administration of all of the provider's Arkansas sites;
D. Home office governance and administration must be documented in a coordinated management plan;
E. The home office shall establish policies for maintaining client records, including policies designating where the original records are stored.
XI.
SITE REQUIREMENTS
A. All sites must be located in the State of Arkansas;
B. Accreditation documentation must specifically include each site.
XII.
SITE RELOCATION, OPENING, AND CLOSING (Note: temporary service disruptions caused by inclement weather or power outages are not "closings.")
A. Planned Closings:
1. Upon deciding to close a site either temporarily or permanently, the provider immediately must provide written notice to clients, DHS, the Division of Medical Services, the Medicaid fiscal agent, and the accrediting organization.
2. Notice of site closure must state the site closure date;
3. If site closure is permanent, the site certification expires at 12:00 a.m. the day following the closure date stated in the notice;
4. If site closing is temporary, and is for reasons unrelated to adverse governmental action, DHS may suspend the site certification for up to one (1) year if the provider maintains possession and control of the site. If the site is not operating and in compliance within the time specified in the site certification suspension, the site certification expires at 12:00 a.m. the day after the site certification suspension ends.
B. Unplanned Closings:
1. If a provider must involuntarily close a site due to, for example, fire, natural disaster, or adverse governmental action, the provider must immediately notify clients and families, DHS, the Division of Medical Services, the Medicaid fiscal agent, and the accrediting organization of the closure and the reason(s) for the closure.
2. Site certification expires in accordance with any pending regulatory action, or, if no regulatory action is pending, at 12:00 a.m. the day following permanent closure.
C. All Closings:
1. Providers must assure and document continuity of care for all clients who receive Outpatient Behavioral Health Services at the site;
2. Notice of Closure and Continuing Care Options:
a. Providers must assure and document that clients and families receive actual notice of the closure, the closure date, and any information and instructions necessary for the client to obtain transition services;
b. After documenting that actual notice to a specific client was impossible despite the exercise of due diligence, providers may satisfy the client notice requirement by mailing a notice containing the information described in subsection (a), above, to the last known address provided by the client; and c. Before closing, providers must post a public notice at each site entry. The public notice must include the name and contact information for all Behavioral Health Agencies within a fifty (50) mile radius of the site.
3. An acceptable transition plan is described below:
Transition Plan:
1.
Identify and list all certified sites within a 50 mile radius. Include telephone numbers and physical addresses on the list.
2.
Provide clients/families with the referral information and have them sign a transfer of records form/release of information to enable records to be transferred to the provider of their choice.
3.
Transfer records to the designated provider._______________________________________
4.
Designate a records retrieval process as specified in Section I of the Arkansas Medicaid Outpatient Behavioral Health Services Provider Policy Manual § 142.300.
5.
Submit a reporting of transfer to DHS (Attn: Policy & Certification Office) including a list of client names and the disposition of each referral. See example below:
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Name
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Referred to:
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Records Transfer Status:
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RX Needs Met By:
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Johnny
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OP Provider Name
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to be delivered 4/30/20XX
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Provided 1 month RX
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Mary
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Private Provider Name
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Delivered 4/28/20XX
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No Meds
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Judy
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Declined Referral
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XX
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6.
DHS may require additional information regarding documentation of client transfers to ensure that client needs are addressed and met.
DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 220 shall be used when a site is to be closed.
D. New Sites: Use DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 250 to apply for new sites, which would include a new Medicaid provider ID number for that site.
E. Site Transfer:
1. At least forty-five (45) calendar days before a proposed transfer of an accredited site, the provider must apply to DHS to transfer site certification. The application must include documentation that:
a. The provider notified the accrediting entity, and the accrediting entity has extended or will extend accreditation to the second site; or
b. The accrediting entity has established an accreditation timeframe.
2. The provider must notify clients and families, DHS, the Division of Medical Services, the Medicaid fiscal agent, and the accrediting organization at least thirty (30) calendar days before the transfer;
3. DHS does not require an on-site survey, nor does the Division of Medical Services require a new Medicaid provider number. Please use DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 220 for a site move or transfers.
F. Site Relocation: The provider must follow the rules for closing the original site, and the rules for opening a new site.
XIII.
PROVIDER RE-CERTIFICATION:
A. The term of DHS site certification is concurrent with the provider's national accreditation cycle, except that site certification extends six (6) months past the accreditation expiration month if there is no interruption in the accreditation. (The six-month extension is to give the Behavioral Health Agency time to receive a final report from the accrediting organization, which the provider must immediately forward to DHS.)
B. Providers must furnish DHS a copy of:
1. Correspondence related to the provider's request for re-accreditation:
a. Providers shall send DHS copies of correspondence from the accrediting agency within five (5) business days of receipt;
b. Providers shall furnish DHS copies of correspondence to the accrediting organization concurrently with sending originals to the accrediting organization.
2. An application for provider and site recertification:
a. DHS must receive provider and site recertification applications at least fifteen (15) business days before the DHS Behavioral Health Agency certification expiration date;
b. The Re-Certification form with required documentation is DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 230 and is available at
www.arkansas.gov/dhs/dhs
.
C. If DHS has not recertified the provider and site(s) before the certification expiration date, certification is void beginning 12:00 a.m. the next day.
XIV.
MAINTAINING DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY CERTIFICATION:
A. Providers must:
1. Maintain compliance;
2. Assure that DHS certification information is current, and to that end must notify DHS within thirty (30) calendar days of any change affecting the accuracy of the provider's certification records;
3. Furnish DHS all correspondence in any form (e.g., letter, facsimile, email) to and from the accrediting organization to DHS within thirty (30) calendar days of the date the correspondence was sent or received except:
a. As stated in § XII;
b. Correspondence related to any change of accreditation status, which providers must send to DHS within three (3) calendar days of the date the correspondence was sent or received.
c. Correspondence related to changes in service delivery, site location, or organizational structure, which providers must send to DHS within ten (10) calendar days of the date the correspondence was sent or received.
4. Display the Behavioral Health Agency certificate for each site at a prominent public location within the site
B. Annual Reports:
1. Providers must furnish annual reports to DHS before July 1 of each year that the provider has been in operation for the preceding twelve (12) months. Community Mental Health Centers and specialty clinics may meet this requirement by submitting the Annual Plan/Basic Services Plan to DHS.
2. Annual report shall be prepared by completing forms provided by DHS. Please use DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 240 for the Behavioral Health Agency annual report.
XV.
NONCOMPLIANCE
A. Failure to comply with this rule may result in one or more of the following:
1. Submission and implementation of an acceptable corrective action plan as a condition of retaining Behavioral Health Agency certification;
2. Suspension of Behavioral Health Agency certification for either a fixed period or until the provider meets all conditions specified in the suspension notice;
3. Termination of Behavioral Health Agency certification.
XVI.
APPEAL PROCESS
A. If DHS denies, suspends, or revokes any Behavioral Health Agency certification (takes adverse action), the affected proposed provider or provider may appeal the DHS adverse action. Notice of adverse action shall comply with Ark. Code Ann. §§
20-77-1701 -1705, and §§1708-1713. Appeals must be submitted in writing to the DHS. The provider has thirty (30) calendar days from the date of the notice of adverse action to appeal. An appeal request received within thirty-five (35) calendar days of the date of the notice will be deemed timely. The appeal must state with particularity the error or errors asserted to have been made by DHS in denying certification, and cite the legal authority for each assertion of error. The provider may elect to continue Medicaid billing under the Behavioral Health Agency program during the appeals process. If the appeal is denied, the provider must return all monies received for Behavioral Health Agency services provided during the appeals process.
B. Within thirty (30) calendar days after receiving an appeal DHS shall:
(1) designate a person who did not participate in reviewing the application or in the appealed-from adverse decision to hear the appeal;
(2) set a date for the appeal hearing;
(3) notify the appellant in writing of the date, time, and place of the hearing. The hearing shall be set within sixty (60) calendar days of the date DHS receives the request for appeal, unless a party to the appeal requests and receives a continuance for good cause.
C. DHS shall tape record each hearing.
D. The hearing official shall issue the decision within forty-five (45) calendar days of the date that the hearing record is completed and closed. The hearing official shall issue the decision in a written document that contains findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the decision. The findings, conclusions, and decision shall be mailed to the appellant except that if the appellant is represented by counsel, a copy of the findings, conclusions, and decision shall also be mailed to the appellant's counsel. The decision is the final agency determination under the Administrative Procedure Act.
E. Delays caused by the appealing party shall not count against any deadline. Failure to issue a decision within the time required is not a decision on the merits and shall not alter the rights or status of any party to the appeal, except that any party may pursue legal process to compel the hearing official to render a decision.
F. Except to the extent that they are inconsistent with this policy, the appeal procedures in the Arkansas Medicaid Outpatient Behavioral Health Services Provider Manual are incorporated by reference and shall control.
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Required Documents to begin processing Independently Licensed Practitioner Certification
All of the following information must be attached to the Independently Licensed Practitioner Certification. Applications not submitted in full will not be processed.
1. Names, credentials and relevant experiences for backup and medication management physicians.
2. Names, credentials and relevant experience of applicant's experience providing behavioral health services.
3. Copies of any affiliation agreements with other agencies/professionals that provide behavioral health services for your clients.
4. Copies of pertinent certifications and/or licenses (i.e. JCAHO, CARF, staff licensure or certification by State boards to practice behavioral health services, etc.). Applicant MUST submit Arkansas licensure which grants the applicant that authority to engage in private/independent practice by the appropriate State Board.
5. Copies of any forms used for documentation (treatment plan, psychosocial history, etc.)
6. Copies of all correspondence and e-mails (e-mails may be copied to the DHS) between the agency and the accrediting organization that pertains to the accreditation of the provider's outpatient behavioral health services.
DHS WILL SCHEDULE AN ONSITE SURVEY WITHIN FORTY-FIVE (45) CALENDAR DAYS OF APPROVING ALL REQUIRED CERTIFICATION DOCUMENTATION.
Please send a cover letter and all application materials to be certified by DHS as an Independently Licensed Practitioner to the following address:
Department of Human Services
Policy & Certification Office
305 South Palm Street
Little Rock, AR 72205
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PERSONNEL QUALIFICATIONS & RESOURCES
1. Attach administrative structure for the new site/s for which extension of certification is being requested.
2. Attach licenses or certifications and resumes of all administrators of the new site. Include the medical director or consulting psychiatrist information if different from the main office site.
3. Attach any contracts with consulting professionals specific to the new site only if additional to the original certification.
PHSYICAL PLANT
1. Attach a list of all new service delivery sites including each site's address (street, city & county), telephone number, fax number, the name of the designated contact person, for each site and that person's email address, the geographic area served by each site and the Outpatient Behavioral Health services available at each site.
2. Attach a photograph of each service delivery site for which you are requesting a certification extension. Include outside entrance to building, staff offices, and waiting area.
SERVICE DELIVERY PLAN THAT IS CURRENTLY IN PLACE FOR EACH NEW SITE
In a narrative report, describe the agency's plan for the provision of services including all requested information in compliance with the current Behavioral Health Agency Certification Policy and Outpatient Behavioral Health Services Medicaid Manual. Please utilize the following format:
1. Type of services available at additional site/s, hours of operation and type of clients served (i.e. children, adults, Seriously Mentally Ill, Seriously Emotionally Disturbed, Juvenile Justice Population, etc.)
2. Provide any information that is specific to the site/s for which certification is being requested that is different from those agency sites already certified by DBHS.
3. Description of agency's crisis services plan that is available at the new site including the policy and procedures for provision of crisis services 24 hours a day 7 days a week.
4. Briefly explain how the new site will utilize and interface with other community resources to provide services for the client.
5. Describe how the new site will be integrated into the Quality Improvement Program of the agency.
ACCREDITATION INFORMATION
I. Attach documentation notifying your accrediting organization of the site/s addition/s and the accrediting organization's acknowledgement of the accreditation extension. Certification extension WILL NOT BE GRANTED until you have the accrediting organization's documentation.
II. Include dates of current accreditation cycle.
Reimbursement by Arkansas Medicaid services shall not occur until the site is certified by the Department of Human Services.
Please send this form along with your application to be certified by DHS as a Behavioral Health Agency to the following address:
Department of Human Services
Policy & Certification Office
305 South Palm Street
Little Rock, AR 72205
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Required Documents to begin processing Partial Hospitalization Certification
All of the following information must be attached to the Partial Hospitalization Certification. Applications not submitted in full will not be processed.
1. Valid Behavioral Health Agency Certification from the Department of Human Services.
2. Physical Address of all requested Partial Hospitalization sites. An on-site inspection will occur at all sites prior to DHS issuing a certification for a Partial Hospitalization program.
3. Personnel Resources for Each Partial Hospitalization program to be certified.
DHS WILL SCHEDULE AN ONSITE SURVEY WITHIN FORTY-FIVE (45) CALENDAR DAYS OF APPROVING ALL REQUIRED CERTIFICATION DOCUMENTATION.
Please send a cover letter and all application materials to be certified by DHS as a Partial Hospitalization program to the following address:
Department of Human Services Policy & Certification Office 305 South Palm Street Little Rock, AR 72205
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PERSONNEL RESOURCES FOR EACH INDIVIDUAL PARTIAL HOSPITALIZATION
PROGRAM (as of the date this is submitted)
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Site Address:
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Partial Hospitalization Facility Director:
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1. Psychiatrists
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2. M.D. Non‐psychiatrists
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3. Psychologists
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4. Independently Licensed Clinicians
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5. Non‐independently Licensed Clinicians
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6. Registered Nurses
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7. Qualified Behavioral Health Providers (Including Certified Peer Support Specialist, Certified Youth Support Specialist, Certified Family Support Partners)
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8. All other staff not included above
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9. Sum of lines 1‐8
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PERSONNEL QUALIFICATIONS & RESOURCES
1. Attach organizational chart for agency making certification application. (Include names of staff for each position)
2. Describe the agency's governing body, to include the makeup of the Board of Directors, and the rules/policies regarding oversight of the executive and administrative staff. Include the coordinated management plan for all operations.
3. Attach policy and procedures related to Code of Ethics and Client Grievance Procedures.
4. Identify one Clinical Director for the entire agency. Include name, credentials, resume and contact information.
5. Attach licenses or certifications and resumes of all administrators, medical director and consulting psychiatrist if medical director is not a psychiatrist.
6. Attach all contracts with consulting professionals.
7. Explain how psychological testing services are delivered. Include names, licenses and any contracts or signed agreements related to psychological services.
8. Attach all existing contracts the agency has with any other providers or agencies (including schools) to provide Outpatient Behavioral Health Services.
9. Attach one job description for Licensed Mental Health Professionals and one for Qualified Behavioral Health Providers.
10. Attach policy for supervision of all direct care staff and the plan for staff training and supervision of those staff whose licensure or certification require professional supervision.
PHYSICAL PLANT(S)
1. Attach a list of all service delivery sites including each site's address (street, city & county), telephone number, fax number, the name of the designated contact person for each site and that person's email address, the geographic area served by each site and the Outpatient Behavioral Health Services available at each site.
2. Submit website if available.
3. Attach a photograph of each service delivery site. Include outside entrance to building, staff offices and waiting area.
4. Describe any projected plan for expansion of the physical plant post Behavioral Health Agency certification. Please include time frames for the expansions.
SERVICE DELIVERY PLAN CURRENTLY IN PLACE FOR EACH SITE
In a narrative report, describe the agency's plan for the provision of services including all requested information in compliance with the current Behavioral Health Agency Certification Policy and Outpatient Behavioral Health Services Medicaid Manual. Please utilize the following format:
I. Type of services available at each site, hours of operation and type of clients served (i.e. children, adults, Seriously Mentally Ill, Seriously Emotionally Disturbed, Juvenile Justice population, school based sites etc.)
II. The number of clients the agency is currently serving. Include the age ranges and total numbers of children (3y/o - 12y/o), adolescents (13 y/o - 17y/o) and adults (18y/o - 21y/o). Also, include the average length of treatment for clients served by the agency.
III. Identify the names and locations of schools where the agency provides services. Include the number of children/adolescents served in each school and specific services that are provided in each school (i.e. individual therapy, group therapy, day treatment case management). If the agency does not currently provide services in school, please identify any plans to do so in the future and the projected number of students anticipated to be treated.
IV. Description of agency's crisis services plan that is available at each site including policy and procedures for provision of crisis services 24 hours a day; 7 days a week.
V. Describe any plans for expansion or reduction in services, as described above, for the current fiscal year.
VI. Treatment Process:
A. Briefly describe the following:
(This item must include a description of the resources and procedures used to ensure the timely delivery of services and the policy addressing family involvement in treatment.)
1. How a client accesses treatment/services
2. Intake/diagnostic process (Include a sample of assessment instrument(s)
3. Treatment planning and review process (Include a sample of Treatment Plan and Treatment Plan Review)
B. Briefly state how Qualified Behavioral Health Providers will be utilized in service delivery including coordination/supervision with clinical staff.
C. Briefly explain how the agency utilizes and interfaces with other community resources to provide services for the recipient.
VII. Substance Abuse Services: Describe in detail substance abuse services provided by the agency, including services for co-occurring disorders.
VIII. Submit plans and activities to overcome cultural and linguistic barriers to treatment.
IX. Quality Assurance & Improvement Efforts:
A. Submit the policy and procedures for the agency's quality assurance committee. Include committee make up, schedule for meetings and procedural activities.
B. Describe any quality improvement efforts the agency has initiated or plans to undertake during the coming fiscal year. Describe the outcomes expected and the methods by which these outcomes will be monitored.
This Behavioral Health Agency Service Resource Summary and Plan of Services should cover the current fiscal year.
Please send this form with your application to be certified by DHS as a Behavioral Health Agency to the following address:
Department of Human Services Policy & Certification Office 305 South Palm Street Little Rock, AR 72205
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Page Two
Notification Form for Closing/Moving
1. In addition to this form, please provide any information that is specific to the site/s for which certification is being requested that is different from those agency sites already certified by DHS.
2. Include a photograph of outside entrance to building, staff offices, and waiting area for all new site locations.
Please send this form with required documentation to the following address:
Department of Human Services Policy & Certification Office 305 South Palm Street Little Rock, AR 72205
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Required Documents to begin processing Therapeutic Communities Certification
All of the following information must be attached to the Acute Crisis Unit Certification. Applications not submitted in full will not be processed.
1. Valid Behavioral Health Agency Certification from the Department of Human Services.
2. Physical Address of all requested Acute Crisis Unit sites. An on-site inspection will occur at all sites prior to DHS issuing a certification as an Acute Crisis Unit.
3. Personnel Resources for each Acute Crisis Unit to be certified.
DHS WILL SCHEDULE AN ONSITE SURVEY WITHIN FORTY-FIVE (45) CALENDAR DAYS OF APPROVING ALL REQUIRED CERTIFICATION DOCUMENTATION.
Please send a cover letter and all application materials to be certified by DHS as an Acute Crisis Unit to the following address:
Department of Human Services Policy & Certification Office 305 South Palm Street Little Rock, AR 72205
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PERSONNEL RESOURCES FOR EACH INDIVIDUAL THERAPUETIC COMMUNITY
(as of the date this is submitted)
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Site Address:
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Therapeutic Communities Facility Director:
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1. Psychiatrists
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2. IVI.D. Non-psychiatrists
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3. Psychologists
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4. Independently Licensed Clinicians
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5. Non-independently Licensed Clinicians
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6. Registered Nurses
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7. Qualified Behavioral Health Providers (Including Certified Peer Support Specialist, Certified Youth Support Specialist, Certified Family Support Partners)
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8. All other staff not included above
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9. Sum of lines 1-8
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Required Documents to begin processing Behavioral Health Agency Provider Certification
All of the following information must be attached to the Behavioral Health Agency Certification. Applications not submitted in full will not be processed.
1. Latest accreditation survey results. (The entire survey report covering outpatient behavioral health services must be included.)
2. Copies of all correspondence and e-mails (e-mails may be copied to the DHS) between the agency and the accrediting organization that pertains to the accreditation of the provider's outpatient behavioral health services.
3. A signed agreement that DHS may receive information directly from the accrediting organization regarding the agency's accreditation and any information pertaining to service delivery. (See DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 200)
4. All Evidence of Compliance, Measures of Success, Performance Improvement Plans, and any Corrective Action Plans submitted to the accreditation organization pertaining to outpatient behavioral health services.
5. Annual Behavioral Health Agency Services and Resource Summary Report with all attachments as designated in the Behavioral Health Agency Services and Resource Summary Form (DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 210).
DHS WILL SCHEDULE AN ONSITE SURVEY WITHIN FORTY-FIVE (45) CALENDAR DAYS OF APPROVING ALL REQUIRED CERTIFICATION DOCUMENTATION.
Please send a cover letter and all application materials to be certified by DHS as a Behavioral Health Agency to the following address:
Department of Human Services Policy & Certification Office 305 South Palm Street Little Rock, AR 72205
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Required Documents to begin processing Behavioral Health Agency Provider Certification
All of the following information must be attached to the Behavioral Health Agency Certification. Applications not submitted in full will not be processed.
1. Latest accreditation survey results. (The entire survey report covering outpatient behavioral health services must be included.)
2. Copies of all correspondence and e-mails (e-mails may be copied to the DHS) between the agency and the accrediting organization that pertains to the accreditation of the provider's outpatient behavioral health services.
3. A signed agreement that DHS may receive information directly from the accrediting organization regarding the agency's accreditation and any information pertaining to service delivery. (See DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 200)
4. All Evidence of Compliance, Measures of Success, Performance Improvement Plans, and any Corrective Action Plans submitted to the accreditation organization pertaining to outpatient behavioral health services.
5. Annual Behavioral Health Agency Services and Resource Summary Report with all attachments as designated in the Behavioral Health Agency Services and Resource Summary Form (DHS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AGENCY Form 210).
DHS WILL SCHEDULE AN ONSITE SURVEY WITHIN FORTY-FIVE (45) CALENDAR DAYS OF APPROVING ALL REQUIRED CERTIFICATION DOCUMENTATION.
Please send a cover letter and all application materials to be certified by DHS as a Behavioral Health Agency to the following address:
Department of Human Services Policy & Certification Office 305 South Palm Street Little Rock, AR 72205
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Required Documents to begin processing Therapeutic Communities Certification
All of the following information must be attached to the Therapeutic Communities Certification. Applications not submitted in full will not be processed.
1. Valid Behavioral Health Agency Certification from the Department of Human Services.
2. Physical Address of all requested Therapeutic Communities sites. An on-site inspection will occur at all sites prior to DHS issuing a certification as a Therapeutic Community.
3. Personnel Resources for Each Therapeutic Community to be certified.
DHS WILL SCHEDULE AN ONSITE SURVEY WITHIN FORTY-FIVE (45) CALENDAR DAYS OF APPROVING ALL REQUIRED CERTIFICATION DOCUMENTATION.
Please send a cover letter and all application materials to be certified by DHS as a Therapeutic Community to the following address:
Department of Human Services Policy & Certification Office 305 South Palm Street Little Rock, AR 72205
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PERSONNEL RESOURCES FOR EACH INDIVIDUAL THERAPUETIC COMMUNITY
(as of the date this is submitted)
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Site Address:
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Therapeutic Communities Facility Director:
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1. Psychiatrists
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2. M.D. Non‐psychiatrists
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3. Psychologists
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4. Independently Licensed Clinicians
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5. Non‐independently Licensed Clinicians
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6. Registered Nurses
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7. Qualified Behavioral Health Providers (Including Certified Peer Support Specialist, Certified Youth Support Specialist, Certified Family Support Partners)
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8. All other staff not included above
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9. Sum of lines 1‐8
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Behavioral Health
Independently Licensed
Practitioners Certification
Manual
ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES
Independently Licensed Practitioner
Provider Certification Rules
I.
PURPOSE:
A. To assure that Outpatient Behavioral Health Services ("OBHS") care and services provided by certified Independently Licensed Practitioners comply with applicable laws, which require, among other things, that all care reimbursed by the Arkansas Medical Assistance Program ("Medicaid") must be provided efficiently, economically, only when medically necessary, and is of a quality that meets professionally recognized standards of health care.
B. The requirements and obligations imposed by §§ I-XIII of this rule are substantive, not procedural.
II.
SCOPE:
A. Current Independently Licensed Practitioner certification under this policy is a condition of Medicaid provider enrollment.
B. Division of Behavioral Health Services ("DHS") Independently Licensed Practitioner certification must be obtained for each site before application for Medicaid provider enrollment. An applicant may submit one application for multiple sites, but DHS will review each site separately and take separate certification action for each site.
III.
DEFINITIONS:
A. "Adverse license action" means any action by a licensing authority that is related to client care, any act or omission warranting exclusion under DHS Policy 1088, or that imposes any restriction on the licensee's practice privileges. The action is deemed to exist when the licensing entity imposes the adverse action except as provided in Ark. Code Ann. §
25-15-211(c).
B. "Applicant" means an Independently Licensed Practitioner that is seeking DHS certification as an Independently Licensed Practitioner.
C. "Certification" means a written designation, issued by DHS, declaring that the provider has demonstrated compliance as declared within and defined by this rule.
D. "Client" means any person for whom an Independently Licensed Practitioner furnishes, or has agreed or undertaken to furnish, Counseling Level Outpatient Behavioral Health services.
E. "Client Information System" means a comprehensive, integrated system of clinical, administrative, and financial records that provides information necessary and useful to deliver client services. Information may be maintained electronically, in hard copy, or both.
F. "Compliance" means conformance with:
1. Applicable state and federal laws, rules, and regulations including, without limitation:
a. Titles XIX and XXI of the Social Security Act and implementing regulations;
b. Other federal laws and regulations governing the delivery of health care funded in whole or in part by federal funds, for example, 42 U.S.C. §
1320c-5;
c. All state laws and rules applicable to Medicaid generally and to an Independently Licensed Practitioner services specifically;
d. Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as amended, and implementing regulations;
e. The Americans With Disabilities Act, as amended, and implementing regulations;
f. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act ("HIPAA"), as amended and implementing regulations.
G. "Contemporaneous" means by the end of the performing provider's first work period following the provision of care of services to be documented, or as provided in the Outpatient Behavioral Health Services manual, whichever is longer.
H. "Coordinated Management Plan" means a plan that the provider develops and carries out to assure compliance and quality improvement.
I. "Corrective Action Plan" (CAP) means a document that describes both short- term remedial steps to achieve compliance and permanent practices and procedures to sustain compliance.
J. "Cultural Competency" means the ability to communicate and interact effectively with people of different cultures, including people with disabilities and atypical lifestyles.
K. "DHS" means the Arkansas Department of Human Services Division of Behavioral Health Services.
L. "Deficiency" means an item or area of noncompliance.
M. "DHS" means the Arkansas Department of Human Services.
N. "Emergency an Independently Licensed Practitioner services" means nonscheduled an Independently Licensed Practitioner services delivered under circumstances where a prudent layperson with an average knowledge of behavioral health care would reasonably believe that an Independently Licensed Practitioner services are immediately necessary to prevent death or serious impairment of health.
O. "Independently Licensed Practitioner" is an individual that is licensed to engage in private/independent practice by the appropriate State Board. The following licensure can qualify as Independently Licensed Practitioners:
1. Licensed Certified Social Worker (LCSW)
2. Licensed Marital and Family Therapist (LMFT)
3. Licensed Psychologist (LP)
4. Licensed Psychological Examiner - Independent (LPEI)
5. Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC)
P. "Mobile care" means a face-to-face intervention with the client at a place other than a certified site operated by the provider. Mobile care must be:
1. Either clinically indicated in an emergent situation or necessary for the client to have access to care in accordance with the care plan;
2. Delivered in a clinically appropriate setting; and
3. Delivered where Medicaid billing is permitted if delivered to a Medicaid eligible client.
Q. "NPDB" means the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration National Provider Data Bank.
R. "Performing provider" means an Independently Licensed Practitioner who personally delivers a care or service directly to a client.
S. "Professionally recognized standard of care" means that degree of skill and learning commonly applied under all the circumstances in the community by the average prudent reputable member of the profession. Conformity with Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) evidence-based practice models is evidence of compliance with professionally recognized standards of care.
T. "Provider" means an Independently Licensed Practitioner that is certified by DHS and enrolled by DMS to provide Outpatient Behavioral Health Services.
U. "Reviewer" means a person employed or engaged by:
1. DHS or a division or office thereof;
2. An entity that contracts with DHS or a division or office thereof.
V. "Site" means a distinct place of business dedicated to the delivery of Outpatient Behavioral Health Services. Each site where an Independently Licensed Practitioner performs services at must be certified by the Division of Behavioral Health Services. Colocation within an office or clinic of a physician or psychologist is allowed for an Independently Licensed Practitioner. However, an Independently Licensed Practitioner site cannot be an adjunct to a school, a day care facility, or a long-term care facility. Each site shall be a bona fide an Independently Licensed Practitioner site.
W. "Site relocation" means closing an existing site and opening a new site.
X. "Site transfer" means moving existing staff, program, and clients from one physical location to a second location.
Y. "Supervise" as used in this rule means to direct, inspect, observe, and evaluate performance.
Z. "Supervision documentation" means written records of the time, date, subject(s), and duration of supervisory contact maintained in the provider's official records.
IV.
COMPLIANCE TIMELINE:
A. All Independently Licensed Practitioner sites must receive an on-site inspection in order to obtain DHS certification as an Independently Licensed Practitioner site.
B. DHS may authorize temporary compliance exceptions for Independently Licensed Practitioners, if deemed necessary by DHS.
V.
APPLICATION FOR DHS INDEPENDENTLY LICENSED PRACTITIONER CERTIFICATION:
B. Applicants must submit the completed application forms and all required attachments for each proposed site to:
Department of Human Services
Division of Behavioral Health Services
Attn. Certification Office
305 S. Palm
Little Rock, AR 72205
C. Each applicant must be an Independently Licensed Practitioner:
1. Whose primary purpose is the delivery of a continuum of outpatient behavioral health services in a free standing independent clinic;
2. That is independent of any DHS certified Behavioral Health Agency.
D. Independently Licensed Practitioner certification is not transferable or assignable.
E. The privileges of an Independently Licensed Practitioners certification are limited to the certified site.
F. Providers may file Medicaid claims only for Outpatient Behavioral Health Services delivered by an Independently Licensed Practitioner.
G. Applications must be made in the name used to identify the business entity to the Secretary of State and for tax purposes.
H. The applicant must attach the Independently Licensed Practitioner family involvement policy to each application.
VI.
APPLICATION REVIEW PROCESS:
A. Timeline:
1. DHS will review Independently Licensed Practitioner application forms and materials within ninety (90) calendar days after DHS receives a complete application package. (DHS will return incomplete applications to senders without review.)
2. For approved applications, a site survey will be scheduled within forty-five (45) calendar days of the approval date.
3. DHS will mail a survey report to the applicant within twenty-five (25) calendar days of the site visit. Providers having deficiencies on survey reports must submit an approvable corrective action plan to DHS within thirty-five (35) calendar days after the date of a survey report.
4. DHS will accept or reject each corrective action plan in writing within twenty (20) calendar days after receipt.
5. Within thirty (30) calendar days after DHS approves a corrective action plan, the applicant must document implementation of the plan and correction of the deficiencies listed in the survey report. Applicants who are unable, despite the exercise of reasonable diligence, to correct deficiencies within the time permitted may obtain up to ten (10) additional days based on a showing of good cause.
6. DHS will furnish site-specific certificates via postal or electronic mail within ten (10) calendar days of issuing a site certification.
B. Survey Components: Each site survey will ensure that the site is in compliance with facility environment requirements, location in Section <000.000> of this certification manual. The site survey will also ensure that the Independently Licensed Practitioner complies with policy requirements and record keeping requirements.
C. Determinations:
1. Application approved.
2. Application returned for additional information.
3. Application denied. DHS will state the reasons for denial in a written response to the applicant.
VII.
DHS Access to Applicants/Providers:
A. DHS may contact applicants and providers at any time;
B. DHS may make unannounced visits to applicants/providers.
C. Applicants/providers shall provide DHS prompt direct access to applicant/provider documents and to applicant/provider staff and contractors.
D. DHS reserves the right to ask any questions or request any additional information related to certification.
VIII.
ADDITIONAL CERTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS:
A. Care and Services must:
1. Comply with all state and federal laws, rules, and regulations applicable to the furnishing of health care funded in whole or in part by federal funds; to all state laws and policies applicable to Arkansas Medicaid generally, and to Outpatient Behavioral Health Services specifically, and to all applicable Department of Human Services ("DHS") policies including, without limitation, DHS Participant Exclusion Policy § 1088.0.0. The Participant Exclusion Policy is available online at
https://dhsshare.arkansas.gov/DHS%20Policies/Forms/By%20Policy.aspx
2. Conform to professionally recognized behavioral health rehabilitative treatment models.
3. Be established by contemporaneous documentation that is accurate and demonstrates compliance. Documentation will be deemed to be contemporaneous if recorded by the end of the performing provider's first work period following the provision of the care or services to be documented, or as provided in the Outpatient Behavioral Health Services manual, whichever is longer.
B. Applicants and Independently Licensed Practitioners must:
1. Be a legal entity in good standing;
2. Maintain all required business licenses;
3. Adopt a mission statement to establish goals and guide activities;
4. Maintain a current organizational chart that identifies administrative and clinical chains of command.
C. Applicants/providers must establish and comply with operating policy that at a minimum implements credible practices and standards for:
1. Compliance;
2. Cultural competence;
3. Provision of services, including referral services, for clients that are indigent, have no source of third party payment, or both, including:
a. Procedures to follow when a client is rejected for lack of a third-party payment source or when a client is discharged for nonpayment of care.
b. Coordinated referral plans for clients that the provider lacks the capacity to provide medically necessary Outpatient Behavioral Health Services. Coordinated referral plans must:
i. Identify in the client record the medically necessary Outpatient Behavioral Health Services that the provider cannot or will not furnish;
ii. State the reason(s) in the client record that the provider cannot or will not furnish the care;
iii. Provide quality-control processes that assure compliance with care, discharge, and transition plans.
IX.
REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTIFICATION
A. Independently Licensed Practitioner may not furnish Outpatient Behavioral Health Services during any time the professional's license is subject to adverse license action.
B. Applicants/providers may not employ/engage a covered health care practitioner after learning that the practitioner:
1. Is excluded from Medicare, Medicaid, or both;
2. Is debarred under Ark. Code Ann. §
19-11-245;
3. Is excluded under DHS Policy 1088; or
4. Was subject to a final determination that the provider failed to comply with professionally recognized standards of care, conduct, or both. For purposes of this subsection, "final determination" means a final court or administrative adjudication, or the result of an alternative dispute resolution process such as arbitration or mediation.
C. Independently Licensed Practitioner must maintain copies of disclosure forms signed by the client, or by the client's parent or guardian before Outpatient Behavioral Health Services are delivered except in emergencies. Such forms must at a minimum:
1. Disclose that the services to be provided are Outpatient Behavioral Health Services;
2. Explain Outpatient Behavioral Health Services eligibility, SED and SMI criteria;
3. Contain a brief description of the Independently Licensed Practitioner services;
4. Explain that all Outpatient Behavioral Health Services care must be medically necessary;
5. Disclose that third party (e.g., Medicaid or insurance) Outpatient Behavioral Health Service payments may be denied based on the third party payer's policies or rules;
6. Identify and define any services to be offered or provided in addition to those offered by the Independently Licensed Practitioner, state whether there will be a charge for such services, and if so, document payment arrangements;
7. Notify that services may be discontinued by the client at any time;
8. Offer to provide copies of Independently Licensed Practitioner and Outpatient Behavioral Health Services rules;
9. Provide and explain contact information for making complaints to the provider regarding care delivery, discrimination, or any other dissatisfaction with care provided by the Independently Licensed Practitioner;
10. Provide and explain contact information for making complaints to state and federal agencies that enforce compliance under § III(G)(1).
D. Outpatient Behavioral Health Services maintained by the Independently Licensed Practitioner must include:
1. Outpatient Services, including individual and family therapy at a minimum.
2. Ability to provide Pharmacologic Management at the certified site or the agreement of collaboration with a physician to provide Pharmacologic Management for clients of the Independently Licensed Practitioner.
3. Ability to refer clients to other practitioners or agencies for Outpatient Behavioral Health Services.
E. Providers must tailor all Outpatient Behavioral Health Services care to individual client need. If client records contain entries that are materially identical, DHS and the Division of Medical Services will, by rebuttable presumption, that this requirement is not met.
F. Outpatient Behavioral Health Services for individuals under age eighteen (18): Providers must establish and implement policies for family identification and engagement in treatment for persons under age eighteen (18), including strategies for identifying and overcoming barriers to family involvement.
G. Emergency Response Services: Applicants/providers must establish, implement, and maintain a site-specific emergency response plan, which must include:
1. A 24-hour emergency telephone number;
2. The applicant/provider must:
a. Provide the 24-hour emergency telephone number to all clients;
b. Post the 24-hour emergency number on all public entries to each site;
c. Include the 24-hour emergency phone number on answering machine greetings;
d. Identify local law enforcement and medical facilities within a 50-mile radius that may be emergency responders to client emergencies.
3. Direct access to a mental health professional within fifteen (15) minutes of an emergency/crisis call and face-to-face crisis assessment within two (2) hours;
4. Response strategies based upon:
a. Time and place of occurrence;
b. Individual's status (client/non-client);
c. Contact source (family, law enforcement, health care provider, etc.).
5. Requirements for a face-to-face response to requests for emergency intervention received from a hospital or law enforcement agency regarding a current client.
6. All face-to-face emergency responses shall be:
a. Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week;
b. Made by a mental health professional within two (2) hours of request (unless a different time frame is within clinical standards guidelines and mutually agreed upon by the requesting party and the MHP responding to the call).
7. Emergency services training requirements to ensure that emergency service are age-appropriate and comply with accreditation requirements. Providers shall maintain documentation of all emergency service training in each trainee's personnel file.
8. Requirements for clinical review by the clinical supervisor or emergency services director within 24 hours of each after-hours emergency intervention with such additional reporting as may be required by the provider's policy.
9. Requirements for documentation of all crisis calls, responses, collaborations, and outcomes;
10. Requirements that emergency responses not vary based on the client's funding source. If a client is eligible for inpatient behavioral health care funded through the community mental health centers and the provider is not a community mental health center with access to these funds, the provider must:
a. Determine whether the safest, least restrictive alternative is psychiatric hospitalization; and
b. Contact the appropriate community mental health center (CMHC) for consult and to request the CMHC to access local acute care funds for those over 21.
11. The above crisis response requirements can be addressed through an agreement with another provider (i.e., Behavioral Health Agency, Independently Licensed
Practitioner). Crisis response plans must be discussed with clients and must be available for review.
O. Each applicant/provider must establish and maintain procedures, competence, and capacity:
1. For assessment and individualized care planning and delivery;
2. For discharge planning integral to treatment;
3. For mobile care;
4. To assure that each mental health professional makes timely clinical disposition decisions;
5. To make timely referrals to other services;
6. To refer for inpatient services or less restrictive alternative;
P. Each applicant/provider must establish, maintain, and document a quality improvement program, to include:
1. Evidence based practices;
2. Requirements for informing all clients and clients' responsible parties of the client's rights while accessing services.
3. Regular (at least quarterly) quality assurance meetings that include:
X.
SITE REQUIREMENTS:
A. All Independently Licensed Practitioner sites must be located inside the State of Arkansas;
B. The Independently Licensed Practitioner site shall obtain an annual fire and safety inspection from the State Fire Marshall or local authorities which documents approval for continued occupancy.
C. All Independently Licensed Practitioner site staff shall know the exact location, contents, and use of first aid supply kits and fire fighting equipment and fire detection systems. All fire fighting equipment shall be annually maintained in appropriately designated areas within the facility.
D. The Independently Licensed Practitioner site shall post written plans and diagrams noting emergency evacuation routes in case of fire, and shelter locations in case of severe weather. All exits must be clearly marked.
E. The Independently Licensed Practitioner site shall be maintained in a manner, which provides a safe environment for clients, personnel, and visitors.
F. The Independently Licensed Practitioner site telephone number(s) and actual hours of operation shall be posted at all public entrances.
G. The Independently Licensed Practitioner site shall establish policies for maintaining client records, including policies designating where the original records are stored.
H. Each Independently Licensed Practitioner site shall maintain an organized medical record keeping system to collect and document information appropriate to the treatment processes. This system shall be organized; easily retrievable, usable medical records stored under confidential conditions and with planned retention and disposition.
XI.
SITE RELOCATION, OPENING, AND CLOSING (Note: temporary service disruptions caused by inclement weather or power outages are not "closings.")
A. Planned Closings:
1. Upon deciding to close a site either temporarily or permanently, the Independently Licensed Practitioner immediately must provide written notice to clients and to the Department of Human Services, Division of Behavioral Health Services.
2. Notice of site closure must state the site closure date;
3. If site closure is permanent, the site certification expires at 12:00 a.m. the day following the closure date stated in the notice;
4. If site closing is temporary, and is for reasons unrelated to adverse governmental action, DHS may suspend the site certification for up to one (1) year if the Independently Licensed Practitioner maintains possession and control of the site. If the site is not operating and in compliance within the time specified in the site certification suspension, the site certification expires at 12:00 a.m. the day after the site certification suspension ends.
B. Unplanned Closings:
1. If an Independently Licensed Practitioner must involuntarily close a site due to, for example, fire, natural disaster, or adverse governmental action, the provider must immediately notify clients and families, DHS, the Division of Medical Services, the Medicaid fiscal agent, and the accrediting organization of the closure and the reason(s) for the closure.
2. Site certification expires in accordance with any pending regulatory action, or, if no regulatory action is pending, at 12:00 a.m. the day following permanent closure.
C. All Closings:
1. Independently Licensed Practitioner must assure and document continuity of care for all clients who receive Outpatient Behavioral Health Services at the site;
2. Notice of Closure and Continuing Care Options:
a. Independently Licensed Practitioner must assure and document that clients and families receive actual notice of the closure, the closure date, and any information and instructions necessary for the client to obtain transition services;
b. After documenting that actual notice to a specific client was impossible despite the exercise of due diligence, Independently Licensed Practitioners may satisfy the client notice requirement by mailing a notice containing the information described in subsection (a), above, to the last known address provided by the client; and
c. Before closing, Independently Licensed Practitioner must post a public notice at the site entry.
3. An acceptable transition plan is described below:
Transition Plan:
1.
Provide clients/families with the referral information and have them sign a transfer of records form/release of information to enable records to be transferred to the provider of their choice.
2.
Transfer records to the designated provider.
4.
Designate a records retrieval process as specified in Section I of the Arkansas Medicaid Outpatient Behavioral Health Services Provider Policy Manual § 142.300.
5.
Submit a reporting of transfer to DHS (Attn: Policy & Certification Office) including a list of client names and the disposition of each referral. See example below:
|
Name
|
Referred to:
|
Records Transfer Status:
|
RX Needs Met By:
|
|
Johnny
|
OP Provider Name
|
to be delivered 4/30/20XX
|
Provided 1 month RX
|
|
Mary
|
Private Provider Name
|
Delivered 4/28/20XX
|
No Meds
|
|
Judy
|
Declined Referral
|
XX
|
|
6.
DHS may require additional information regarding documentation of client transfers to ensure that client needs are addressed and met.
A site closing Form is available at: www.arkansas.gov/dhs/dhs See appendix # 9
D. New Sites: Providers may apply for a new site by completing the new site Form available at
www.arkansas.gov/dhs/dhs
See appendix # 10 DHS Form # 5 - (Adding Site)
E. Site Transfer:
1. At least forty-five (45) calendar days before a proposed transfer of a certified site, the provider must apply to DHS to transfer site certification.
2. The provider must notify clients and families at least thirty (30) calendar days before the transfer;
3. DHS requires an on-site survey prior to allowance of service at the new site. The Division of Medical Services does not require a new Medicaid provider number. The moving or transferring site form is available at:
www.arkansas.gov/dhs/dhs
See appendix # 9 - DHS Form # 4 (Closing and Moving Sites)
F. Site Relocation: The provider must follow the rules for closing the original site, and the rules for opening a new site.
XII.
PROVIDER RE-CERTIFICATION:
A. The term of DHS site certification is continuous for 3 years from the date of Certification as long as the site is not transferred and the Independently Licensed Practitioner maintains appropriate Licensure. If an Independently Licensed Practitioner loses appropriate licensure, the site that they operate in will lose certification.
B. Providers must furnish DHS a copy of:
1. An application for provider and site recertification:
a. DHS must receive provider and site recertification applications at least fifteen (15) business days before the DHS Independently Licensed Practitioner certification expiration date;
b. The Re-Certification form with required documentation is available at
www.arkansas.gov/dhs/dhs
See Appendix # 11 DHS Form 3 (Re-certification)
C. If DHS has not recertified the provider and site(s) before the certification expiration date, certification is void beginning 12:00 a.m. the next day.
XIII.
MAINTAINING DHS INDEPENDENTLY LICNESED PRACTITIONER CERTIFICATION:
A. Providers must:
1. Maintain compliance;
2. Assure that DHS certification information is current, and to that end must notify DHS within thirty (30) calendar days of any change affecting the accuracy of the provider's certification records;
3. Display the Independently Licensed Practitioner certificate for each site at a prominent public location within the site
B. Annual Reports:
1. Providers must furnish annual reports to DHS before July 1 of each year that the provider has been in operation for the preceding twelve (12) months.
1. Annual report shall be prepared by completing forms provided by DHS. The annual report form is available at
www.arkansas.gov/dhs/dhs and at Appendix # 12 DHS Form # 6
XIV.
NONCOMPLIANCE
A. Failure to comply with this rule may result in one or more of the following:
1. Submission and implementation of an acceptable corrective action plan as a condition of retaining Independently Licensed Practitioner certification;
2. Suspension of Independently Licensed Practitioner certification for either a fixed period or until the provider meets all conditions specified in the suspension notice;
3. Termination of Independently Licensed Practitioner certification.
XV.
APPEAL PROCESS
A. If DHS denies, suspends, or revokes any Independently Licensed Practitioner certification (takes adverse action), the affected proposed provider or provider may appeal the DHS adverse action. Notice of adverse action shall comply with Ark. Code Ann. §§
20-77-1701 -1705, and §§1708-1713. Appeals must be submitted in writing to the DHS Director. The provider has thirty (30) calendar days from the date of the notice of adverse action to appeal. An appeal request received within thirty-five (35) calendar days of the date of the notice will be deemed timely. The appeal must state with particularity the error or errors asserted to have been made by DHS in denying certification, and cite the legal authority for each assertion of error. The provider may elect to continue Medicaid billing under the Outpatient Behavioral Health Services program during the appeals process. If the appeal is denied, the provider must return all monies received for Independently Licensed Practitioner services provided during the appeals process.
B. Within thirty (30) calendar days after receiving an appeal the DHS Director shall:
(1) designate a person who did not participate in reviewing the application or in the appealed-from adverse decision to hear the appeal;
(2) set a date for the appeal hearing;
(3) notify the appellant in writing of the date, time, and place of the hearing. The hearing shall be set within sixty (60) calendar days of the date DHS receives the request for appeal, unless a party to the appeal requests and receives a continuance for good cause.
C. DHS shall tape record each hearing.
D. The hearing official shall issue the decision within forty-five (45) calendar days of the date that the hearing record is completed and closed. The hearing official shall issue the decision in a written document that contains findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the decision. The findings, conclusions, and decision shall be mailed to the appellant except that if the appellant is represented by counsel, a copy of the findings, conclusions, and decision shall also be mailed to the appellant's counsel. The decision is the final agency determination under the Administrative Procedure Act.
E. Delays caused by the appealing party shall not count against any deadline. Failure to issue a decision within the time required is not a decision on the merits and shall not alter the rights or status of any party to the appeal, except that any party may pursue legal process to compel the hearing official to render a decision.
F. Except to the extent that they are inconsistent with this policy, the appeal procedures in the Arkansas Medicaid Outpatient Behavioral Health Services Provider Manual are incorporated by reference and shall control.
Partial Hospitalization Certification
I.
GENERAL PROVISIONS
a.
Purpose
This chapter sets forth the Standards and Criteria used in the certification of Partial Hospitalization Providers by the Arkansas Department of Human Services, Division of Behavioral Health Services. The rules regarding the certification processes including, but not necessarily limited to, applications, requirements for, levels of, and administrative sanctions are found in this manual.
b.
Definitions
The following words or terms, when used in this Chapter, shall have the defined meaning, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
i.
"Abuse" means the causing or permitting of harm or threatened harm to the health, safety, or welfare of a resident by a staff responsible for the client's health, safety, or welfare, including but not limited to: non-accidental physical injury or mental anguish; sexual abuse; sexual exploitation; use of mechanical restraints without proper authority; the intentional use of excessive or unauthorized force aimed at hurting or injuring the resident; or deprivation of food, clothing, shelter, or healthcare by a staff responsible for providing these services to a resident.
ii.
"Adverse license action" means any action by a licensing authority that is related to client care, any act or omission warranting exclusion under DHS Policy 1088, or that imposes any restriction on the licensee's practice privileges. The action is deemed to exist when the licensing entity imposes the adverse action except as provided in Ark. Code Ann. §
25-15-211(c).
iii.
"Certification" means a written designation, issued by DHS, declaring that the provider has demonstrated compliance as declared within and defined by this rule.
iv.
"Clinical privileging" means an organized method for treatment facilities to authorize an individual permission to provide specific care and treatment services to clients within well-defined limits, based on the evaluation of the individual's license, education, training, experience, competence, judgment, and other credentials.
v.
"Client" means any person for whom a Partial Hospitalization Program furnishes, or has agreed or undertaken to furnish, services.
vi.
"Co-occurring disorder" means any combination of mental health and substance use disorder symptoms or diagnoses in a client.
vii.
"Co-occurring disorder capability" means the organized capacity within any type of program to routinely screen, identify, assess, and provide properly matched interventions to individuals with co-occurring disorders.
viii.
"Compliance" means conformance with:
1. Applicable state and federal laws, rules, and regulations including, without limitation:
a. Titles XIX and XXI of the Social Security Act and implementing regulations;
b. Other federal laws and regulations governing the delivery of health care funded in whole or in part by federal funds, for example, 42 U.S.C. §
1320c-5;
c. All state laws and rules applicable to Medicaid generally and to Partial Hospitalization Program services specifically;
d. Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as amended, and implementing regulations;
e. The Americans With Disabilities Act, as amended, and implementing regulations;
f. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act ("HIPAA"), as amended, and implanting regulations.
ix.
"Critical incident" means an occurrence or set of events inconsistent with the routine operation of the facility, or the routine care of a client. Critical incidents specifically include but are not necessarily limited to the following: adverse drug events; self-destructive behavior; deaths and injuries to clients, staff and visitors; medication errors; clients that are absent without leave (AWOL); neglect or abuse of a client; fire; unauthorized disclosure of information; damage to or theft of property belonging to a clients or the facility; other unexpected occurrences; or events potentially subject to litigation. A critical incident may involve multiple individuals or results.
x. "Deficiency" means an item or area of noncompliance.
xi. "DHS" means the Arkansas Department of Human Services.
xii.
"Initial Assessment" means examination of current and recent behaviors and symptoms of an individual who appears to be mentally ill or substance dependent.
xiii.
"Intervention plan" means a description of services to be provided in response to the presenting crisis situation that incorporates the identified problem(s), strengths, abilities, needs and preferences of the individual served.
xiv.
"Linkage services" means the communication and coordination with other service providers that assure timely appropriate referrals between the Partial Hospitalization Program and other providers.
xv. "Mental health professional" or "MHP" means a person who possesses an Arkansas license to provide clinical behavioral health care. The license must be in good standing and not subject to any adverse license action.
xvi.
"Minor" means any person under eighteen (18) years of age.
xvii.
"Performance Improvement" or "PI" means an approach to the continuous study and improvement of the processes of providing health care services to meet the needs of clients and others. Synonyms, and near synonyms include continuous performance improvement, continuous improvement, organization-wide performance improvement and total quality management.
xviii.
"Persons with special needs" means any persons with a condition which is considered a disability or impairment under the "American with Disabilities Act of 1990" including, but not limited to the deaf/hearing impaired, visually impaired, physically dis-abled, developmentally disabled, persons with disabling illness, persons with mental illness and/or substance abuse disorders. See "Americans with Disabilities Handbook," published by U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and U.S. Department of Justice.
xix. "Professionally recognized standard of care" means that degree of skill and learning commonly applied under all the circumstances in the community by the average prudent reputable member of the profession. Conformity with Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) evidence-based practice models is evidence of compliance with professionally recognized standards of care.
xx.
"Progress notes" mean a chronological description of services provided to a client, the client's progress, or lack of, and documentation of the client's response related to the intervention plan.
xxi. "Provider" means an entity that is certified by DHS as a Partial Hospitalization Program and enrolled by DMS as a Behavioral Health Agency.
xxii.
"Psychosocial evaluations" are in-person interviews conducted by professionally trained personnel designed to elicit historical and current information regarding the behavior and experiences of an individual, and are designed to provide sufficient information for problem formulation and intervention.
xxiii.
"Qualified Behavioral Health Provider" means a person who:
1. Does not possess an Arkansas license to provide clinical behavioral health care;
2. Works under the direct supervision of a mental health professional;
3. Has successfully completed prescribed and documented courses of initial and annual training sufficient to perform all tasks assigned by a mental health professional;
4. Acknowledges in writing that all qualified behavioral health provider services are controlled by client care plans and provided under the direct supervision of a mental health professional.
xxiv.
"Restraint" refers to manual, mechanical, and chemical methods that are intended to restrict the movement or normal functioning of a portion of the individual's body. For clients: mechanical restraints shall not be used.
xxv.
"Sentinel event" is a type of critical incident that is an unexpected occurrence involving the death or serious physical or psychological injury to a client, or risk thereof. Serious injury specifically includes loss of limb or function. The phrase "or risk thereof" includes a variation in approved processes which could carry a significant chance of a serious adverse outcome to a client. These events signal the need for immediate investigation and response. Sentinel events include, but are not limited to: suicide, homicide, criminal activity, assault and other forms or violence, including domestic violence or sexual assault, and adverse drug events resulting in serious injury or death.
xxvi.
"Trauma Informed" means the recognition and responsiveness to the presence of the effects of past and current traumatic experiences in the lives of all clients.
II.
Meaning of verbs in rules
The attention of the facility is drawn to the distinction between the use of the words "shall," "should," and "may" in this chapter:
(1) "Shall" is the term used to indicate a mandatory statement, the only acceptable method under the present standards.
(2) "Should" is the term used to reflect the most preferable procedure, yet allowing for the use of effective alternatives.
(3) "May" is the term used to reflect an acceptable method that is recognized but not necessarily preferred.