Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 59A-4.1295 - Additional Standards for Homes That Admit Children 0 Through 20 Years of Age
(1) Nursing homes
who accept children with a level of care of Intermediate I or II, skilled or
medically fragile must meet the following standards as indicated. Intermediate
I and II are defined in Rule
59G-4.180, F.A.C. Children
considered skilled have a chronic debilitating disease or condition of one or
more physiological or organ systems that generally make the child dependent
upon 24 hour per day medical, nursing, or health supervision or intervention.
Medically fragile children are medically complex and the medical condition is
such that they are technologically dependent upon medical equipment or
procedure(s) to sustain life and who can expire, without warning unless
continually under observation.
(2)
Each child must have an assessment upon admission by licensed physical,
occupational, and speech therapists experienced in working with children.
Therapies must be administered based upon the outcome of these assessments and
the orders of the child's physician.
(3) Admission criteria:
(a) The child must require intermediate,
skilled or medically fragile nursing care, and be medically stable, as
documented by the physician determining level of care.
(b) For nursing home placement a
recommendation must be made in the form of a written order by the child's
attending physician in consultation with the parent(s) or legal guardian(s).
For Medicaid certified nursing facilities, the recommendations for placement of
a Medicaid applicant or recipient in the nursing home must be made by the
Department of Health's Children's Medical Services Multidisciplinary Assessment
Team (CMAT). Consideration must be given to relevant medical, emotional,
psychosocial, and environmental factors.
(c) Each child admitted to the nursing home
must have a plan of care developed by the interdisciplinary care plan team. The
plan of care must consist of those items listed below.
1. Physician's orders, diagnosis, medical
history, physical examination and rehabilitative or restorative
needs.
2. A preliminary nursing
evaluation with physician orders for immediate care, completed on
admission.
3. A comprehensive,
accurate, reproducible, and standardized assessment of each child's functional
capability which is completed within 14 days of the child's admission to the
nursing home and every twelve months thereafter. The assessment must be:
a. Reviewed no less than once every 120
days;
b. Reviewed promptly after a
significant change, which is a need to stop a form of treatment because of
adverse consequences (e.g., an adverse drug reaction), or commence a new form
of treatment to deal with a problem in the child's physical or mental
condition;
c. Revised as
appropriate to assure the continued usefulness of the
assessment.
4. The plan
of care must also include measurable objectives and timetables to meet the
child's medical, nursing, mental and psychosocial needs identified in the
comprehensive assessment. The care plan must describe the services that are to
be furnished to attain or maintain the child's highest practicable physical,
mental, social and educational well-being. The care plan must be completed
within 7 days after completion of the child's assessments.
5. The facility must, upon admission and
quarterly, conduct and include in the resident's plan of care a comprehensive
assessment of the resident's functional capacity and a post-discharge plan of
care that includes plans, actions and goals to transition the child to a home
and community-based, non-institutional setting.
6. To enhance the quality of life of each
child ages 3 years through 15 years, the nursing home must notify by certified
mail the school board in the county in which the nursing home is located that
there is a school-age child residing in the nursing home. Children ages 16
through 20 years may be enrolled in an education program according to their
ability to participate. Program participation for each child regardless of age
is predicated on his or her intellectual function, physical limitations, and
medical stability. Collaborative planning with the public school system and
community at-large is necessary to produce integrated and inclusive settings
which meet each child's needs. The failure or inability on the part of city,
county, state, or federal school system to provide an educational program
according to the child's ability to participate shall not obligate the nursing
home to supply or furnish an educational program or bring suit against any
city, county, state, or federal organizations for their failure or inability to
provide an educational program. Nothing contained herein is intended to
prohibit, restrict or prevent the parents or legal guardian of the child from
providing a private educational program that meets applicable state
laws.
7. At the child's guardian's
option, every effort must be made to include the child and his or her family or
responsible party, including private duty nurse or nursing assistant, in the
development, implementation, maintenance and evaluation of the child's plan of
care.
8. All employees of the
nursing home who provide hands-on care, must be knowledgeable of, and have
access to, the child's plan of care.
9. A summary of the child's plan of care must
accompany each child discharged or transferred to another health care facility
or must be forwarded to the facility receiving the child as soon as possible
consistent with good medical practice.
(4) The child's attending physician, licensed
under Rule Chapter 458 or 459, F.S., must maintain responsibility for the
overall medical management and therapeutic plan of care and must be available
for face-to-face consultation and collaboration with the nursing home medical
and nursing director. The physician or his or her designee must:
(a) Evaluate and document the status of the
child's condition at least monthly;
(b) Review and update the plan of care every
60 days;
(c) Prepare orders as
needed and accompany them by a signed progress note in the child's medical
record; and,
(d) Co-sign verbal
orders no more than 72 hours after the order is given. Physician orders may be
transmitted by facsimile machine. It is not necessary for a physician to
re-sign a facsimile order when he or she visits a nursing home. Orders
transmitted via computer mail are not acceptable. Verbal orders not co-signed
within seventy-two (72) hours shall not be held against the nursing home if it
has documented timely, good-faith efforts to obtain said co-signed
orders.
(5) The following
must be completed for each child. A registered nurse must be responsible for
ensuring these tasks are accomplished:
(a)
Informing the attending physician and medical director of beneficial and
untoward effects of the therapeutic interventions;
(b) Maintaining the child's record in
accordance with nursing home policies and procedures; and,
(c) Instructing or arranging for the
instruction of the parent(s), legal guardian(s), or other caretakers(s) on how
to provide the necessary interventions, how to interpret responses to
therapies, and how to manage unexpected responses in order to facilitate a
smooth transition from the nursing home to the home or other placement. This
instruction must cover care coordination and must gradually pass the role of
care coordinator to the parent or legal guardian, as
appropriate.
(6) In
addition to the requirements of Rule
59A-4.133, F.A.C., the nursing
home must provide the following:
(a) A minimum
of 100 square feet in a single bedroom and 80 square feet per child in multiple
bedrooms;
(b) Bathroom and bathing
facilities appropriate to the child's needs to allow for:
1. Toileting functions with privacy (a door
to the bathroom must be provided); and,
2. Stall showers and
tubs.
(c) There must be
indoor activities area that:
1. Encourage
exploration and maximize the child's capabilities;
2. Accommodate mobile and non-mobile
children; and,
3. Support a range
of activities for children and adolescents of varying ages and
abilities.
(d) There must
be an outdoor activity area that is:
1. Secure
with areas of sun and shade;
2.
Free of safety hazards; and,
3.
Equipped with age appropriate recreational equipment for developmental level of
children and has storage space for same.
(e) All furniture and adaptive equipment must
be physically appropriate to the developmental and medical needs of the
children;
(f) Other equipment and
supplies must be made available to meet the needs of the children as prescribed
or recommended by the attending physician or medical director and in accordance
with professional standards of care.
(7) For those nursing homes who admit
children age 0 through 15 years of age the following standards apply in
addition to those above and throughout Chapter 59A-4, F.A.C.
(a) Each child must have an assessment upon
admission by licensed physical, occupational, and speech therapists who are
experienced in working with children. Therapies must be administered based upon
the outcome of these assessments and the orders of the child's
physician.
(b) The nursing home
must have a contract with a board certified pediatrician who serves as a
consultant and liaison between the nursing home and the medical community for
quality and appropriateness of services to children.
(c) The nursing home must essure that
pediatric physicians are available for routine and emergency consultation to
meet the children's needs.
(d) The
nursing home must ensure that children reside in distinct and separate units
from adults.
(e) The nursing home
must provide access to emergency and other forms of transportation for
children.
(f) At least one licensed
health care staff person with current Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS)
certification for children must be on the unit where children are residing at
all times.
(g) The nursing home
must maintain an Emergency Medication Kit of pediatric medications, as well as
adult dosages for those children who require adult doses. The contents in the
Emergency Medication Kit must be determined by the children's needs in
consultation with the Medical Director, Director of Nursing, a registered nurse
who has current experience working with children, and a Pharmacist who has
pediatric expertise. The kit must be readily available and must be kept sealed.
All items in the kit must be properly labeled. The nursing home must maintain
an accurate log of receipt and disposition of each item in the Emergency
Medication Kit. An inventory to include expiration dates of the contents of the
Emergency Medication Kit must be attached to the outside of the kit. If the
seal is broken, the kit must be restocked and resealed the next business day
after use.
(h) Each nursing home
must develop, implement, and maintain a written staff education plan which
ensures a coordinated program for staff education for all nursing home
employees who work with children. The plan must:
1. Be reviewed at least annually by the
quality assurance committee and revised as needed.
2. Include both pre-service and in-service
programs. In-service for each department must include pediatric-specific
requirements as relevant to its discipline.
3. Ensure that education is conducted
annually for all nursing home employees who work with children in the following
areas:
a. Childhood diseases to include
prevention and control of infection;
b. Childhood accident prevention and safety
awareness programs; and,
4. Ensure that all employees of the nursing
home complete an initial educational course on HIV and AIDS, preferably
pediatric HIV and AIDS in accordance with Section
381.0035, F.S. If the employee
does not have a certificate of completion at the time they are hired, they must
have completed the course within six months of employment.
(i) All nursing home staff must receive
in-service training in and demonstrate awareness of issues particular to
pediatric residents annually.
(8) The nursing home must have at least one
registered nurse for every 40 children. This registered nurse must be on duty,
onsite, 24 hours per day on the unit where the children reside.
(9) A qualified dietitian with knowledge,
expertise and experience in the nutritional management of medically involved
children must evaluate the needs and special diet of each child at least every
60 days.
(10) The pharmacist must
have access to appropriate knowledge concerning pediatric pharmaceutical
procedures, i.e., total parenteral nutrition (TPN) infusion regime and be
familiar with pediatric medications and dosages.
(11) The nursing home must maintain or
contract as needed for pediatric dental services.
(12) Safety equipment, such as, child proof
safety latches on closets, cabinets, straps on all seating services, locks on
specific storage cabinets, bumper pads on cribs and car seats for transporting
must be used whenever appropriate to ensure the safety of the child.
(13) Pediatric equipment and supplies must be
available as follows:
(a) Suction machines,
one per child requiring suction, plus one suction machine for emergency
use;
(b) Oxygen, in portable tanks
with age appropriate supplies;
(c)
Thermometers;
(d)
Spyhgmomanometers, stethoscopes, otoscopes; and,
(e) Apnea monitor and pulse
oximeter.
(14) Other
equipment and supplies must be made available to meet the needs of the children
as prescribed or recommended by the attending physician or medical director and
in accordance with professional standards of care.
(15) Prior to initiating or expanding
services to pediatric residents, the nursing home licensee or applicant must
receive written approval from the Agency. In order to convert existing nursing
home beds to pediatric beds, nursing home licensees must:
(a) Have a standard license pursuant to
Section 400.062, F.S.;
(b) Submit approval from the Office of Plans
and Construction based upon submission of plans and specifications of the
building for approval as outlined in Rule
59A-4.133, F.A.C.;
(c) Submit a completed Health Care Licensing
Application, Nursing Homes, AHCA Form 3110-6001, as incorporated in Rule
59A-4.103, F.A.C., no less than
30 days prior to the anticipated date that services will be provided. The
application must include the number and configuration of beds to be used to
serve pediatric residents and a listing of services that will be
provided.
(16) Approval to
provide pediatric services shall be based upon demonstration of compliance with
this rule and Chapter 400, Part II, F.S.
(17) Any changes in pediatric services,
including cessation of services, must be reported to the Agency in writing at
least 30 days prior to the change.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 400.23(2), 408.819 FS. Law Implemented 400.23(5), 400.071, 408.806 FS.
New 11-5-96, Amended 9-7-97, 12-4-16.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.