Payment will be approved for all reasonable and necessary
services provided by a psychiatrist on the staff of a community mental health
center Payment will be approved for services provided by a clinical
psychologist, social worker or psychiatric nurse on the staff of the center,
subject to the following conditions:
(6) Payment to a community
mental health center will be approved for day treatment services for persons
aged 21 or over if the center is certified by the department for day treatment
services, the services are provided on the premises of the community mental
health center or satellite office of the community mental health center, and
the services meet the standards outlined herein.
a. Community mental health centers providing
day treatment services for persons aged 21 or over shall have available a
written narrative providing the following day treatment information:
(1) Documented need for day treatment
services for persons aged 21 and over in the area served by the program,
including studies, needs assessments, and consultations with other health care
professionals.
(2) Goals and
objectives of the day treatment program for persons aged 21 and over that meet
the day treatment program guidelines noted in 78.16(6)"b. "
(3) Organization and staffing
including how the day treatment program for persons aged 21 and over fits with
the rest of the community mental health center, the number of staff, staff
credentials, and the staff's relationship to the program, e.g., employee,
contractual, or consultant.
(4)
Policies and procedures for the program including admission criteria, patient
assessment, treatment plan, discharge plan, postdischarge services, and the
scope of services provided.
(5) Any
accreditations or other types of approvals from national or state
organizations.
(6) The physical
facility and any equipment to be utilized.
b. Day treatment services for persons aged 21
and over shall be structured, long-term services designed to assist in
restoring, maintaining or increasing levels of functioning, minimizing
regression, and preventing hospitalization.
(1) Service components include training in
independent functioning skills necessary for self-care, emotional stability and
psychosocial interactions and training in medication management.
(2) Services are structured with an emphasis
on program variation according to individual need.
(3) Services are provided for a period of
three to five hours per day, three or four times per week.
c. Payment will be approved for day treatment
services provided by or under the general supervision of a mental health
professional as defined in rule 441-33.1 (225C,230A). When services are
provided by an employee or consultant of the community mental health center who
is not a mental health professional, the employee or consultant shall be
supervised by a mental health professional who gives professional direction and
active guidance to the employee or consultant and who retains responsibility
for consumer care. The supervision shall be timely, regular, and documented.
The employee or consultant shall meet the following minimum requirements:
(1) Have a bachelor's degree in a human
services related field from an accredited college or university; or
(2) Have an Iowa license to practice as a
registered nurse with two years of experience in the delivery of nursing or
human services.
d.
Persons aged 18 through 20 with chronic mental illness as defined by rule
441-24.1 (225C) can
receive day treatment services under this subrule or subrule
78.16(7).
(7) Payment to
a community mental health center will be approved for day treatment services
for persons aged 20 or under if the center is certified by the department for
day treatment services and the services are provided on the premises of the
community mental health center or satellite office of the community mental
health center Exception: Field trips away from the premises are a covered
service when the trip is therapeutic and integrated into the day treatment
program's description and milieu plan.
Day treatment coverage will be limited to a maximum of 15
hours per week. Day treatment services for persons aged 20 or under shall be
outpatient services provided to persons who are not inpatients in a medical
institution or residents of a group care facility licensed under 441-Chapter
114.
a.
Program
documentation. Community mental health centers providing day treatment
services for persons aged 20 or under shall have available a written narrative
which provides the following day treatment program information:
(1) Documented need for day treatment
services for persons aged 20 or under in the area served by the program,
including studies, needs assessments, and consultations with other health care
professionals.
(2) Goals and
objectives of the day treatment program for persons aged 20 or under that meet
the guidelines noted in paragraphs"c " to"h "
below.
(3) Organization and
staffing including how the day treatment program for persons aged 20 or under
fits with the rest of the community mental health center, the number of staff,
staff credentials, and the staff's relationship to the program, e.g., employee,
contractual, or consultant.
(4)
Policies and procedures for the program including admission criteria, patient
assessment, treatment plan, discharge plan, postdischarge services, and the
scope of services provided.
(5) Any
accreditations or other types of approvals from national or state
organizations.
(6) The physical
facility and any equipment to be utilized.
b.
Program standards.
Medicaid day treatment program services for persons aged 20 and under shall
meet the following standards:
(1) Staffing
shall:
1. Be sufficient to deliver program
services and provide stable, consistent, and cohesive milieu with a
staff-to-patient ratio of no less than one staff for each eight participants.
Clinical, professional, and paraprofessional staff may be counted in
determining the staff-to-patient ratio. Professional or clinical staff are
those staff who are either mental health professionals as defined in rule
441-33.1 (225C,230A) or persons employed for the purpose of providing offered
services under the supervision of a mental health professional. All other staff
(administrative, adjunctive, support, nonclinical, clerical, and consulting
staff or professional clinical staff) when engaged in administrative or
clerical activities shall not be counted in determining the staff-to-patient
ratio or in defining program staffing patterns. Educational staff may be
counted in the staflf-to-patient ratio.
2. Reflect how program continuity will be
provided.
3. Reflect an
interdisciplinary team of professionals and paraprofessionals.
4. Include a designated director who is a
mental health professional as defined in rule 441-33.1 (225C,230A). The
director shall be responsible for direct supervision of the individual
treatment plans for participants and the ongoing assessment of program
effectiveness.
5. Be provided by or
under the general supervision of a mental health professional as defined in
rule 441-33.1 (225C,230A). When services are provided by an employee or
consultant of the community mental health center who is not a mental health
professional, the employee or consultant shall be supervised by a mental health
professional who gives direct professional direction and active guidance to the
employee or consultant and who retains responsibility for consumer care. The
supervision shall be timely, regular and documented. The employee or consultant
shall have a bachelor's degree in a human services related field from an
accredited college or university or have an Iowa license to practice as a
registered nurse with two years of experience in the delivery of nursing or
human services. Exception: Other certified or licensed staff, such as certified
addiction counselors or certified occupational and recreational therapy
assistants, are eligible to provide direct services under the general
supervision of a mental health professional, but they shall not be included in
the staff-to-patient ratio.
(2) There shall be written policies and
procedures addressing the following: admission criteria; patient assessment;
patient evaluation; treatment plan; discharge plan; community linkage with
other psychiatric, mental health, and human service providers; a process to
review the quality of care being provided with a quarterly review of the
effectiveness of the clinical program; postdischarge services; and the scope of
services provided.
(3) The program
shall have hours of operation available for a minimum of three consecutive
hours per day, three days or evenings per week.
(4) The length of stay in a day treatment
program for persons aged 20 or under shall not exceed 180 treatment days per
episode of care, unless the rationale for a longer stay is documented in the
patient's case record and treatment plan every 30 calendar days after the first
180 treatment days.
(5) Programming
shall meet the individual needs of the patient. A description of services
provided for patients shall be documented along with a schedule of when service
activities are available including the days and hours of program
availability.
(6) There shall be a
written plan for accessing emergency services 24 hours a day, seven days a
week.
(7) The program shall
maintain a community liaison with other psychiatric, mental health, and human
service providers. Formal relationships shall exist with hospitals providing
inpatient programs to facilitate referral, communication, and discharge
planning. Relationships shall also exist with appropriate school districts and
educational cooperatives. Relationships with other entities such as physicians,
hospitals, private practitioners, halfway houses, the department, juvenile
justice system, community support groups, and child advocacy groups are
encouraged. The provider's program description will describe how community
links will be established and maintained.
(8) Psychotherapeutic treatment services and
psychosocial rehabilitation services shall be available. A description of the
services shall accompany the application for certification.
(9) The program shall maintain a distinct
clinical record for each patient admitted. Documentation, at a minimum, shall
include: the specific services rendered, the date and actual time services were
rendered, who rendered the services, the setting in which the services were
rendered, the amount of time it took to deliver the services, the relationship
of the services to the treatment regimen described in the plan of care, and
updates describing the patient's progress.
c.
Program services. Day
treatment services for persons aged 20 or under shall be a time-limited,
goal-oriented active treatment program that offers therapeutically intensive,
coordinated, structured clinical services within a stable therapeutic milieu.
Time-limited means that the patient is not expected to need services
indefinitely or lifelong, and that the primary goal of the program is to
improve the behavioral functioning or emotional adjustment of the patient in
order that the service is no longer necessary. Day treatment services shall be
provided within the least restrictive therapeutically appropriate context and
shall be community-based and family focused. The overall expected outcome is
clinically adaptive behavior on the part of the patient and the family.
At a minimum, day treatment services will be expected to
improve the patient's condition, restore the condition to the level of
functioning prior to onset of illness, control symptoms, or establish and
maintain a functional level to avoid further deterioration or hospitalization.
Services are expected to be age-appropriate forms of psychosocial
rehabilitation activities, psychotherapeutic services, social skills training,
or training in basic care activities to establish, retain or encourage
age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate psychosocial, educational, and
emotional adjustment.
Day treatment programs shall use an integrated, comprehensive
and complementary schedule of therapeutic activities and shall have the
capacity to treat a wide array of clinical conditions.
The following services shall be available as components of
the day treatment program. These services are not separately billable to
Medicaid, as day treatment reimbursement includes reimbursement for all day
treatment components.
(1)
Psychotherapeutic treatment services (examples would include individual, group,
and family therapy).
(2)
Psychosocial rehabilitation services. Active treatment examples include, but
are not limited to, individual and group therapy, medication evaluation and
management, expressive therapies, and theme groups such as communication
skills, assertiveness training, other forms of community skills training,
stress management, chemical dependency counseling, education, and prevention,
symptom recognition and reduction, problem solving, relaxation techniques, and
victimization (sexual, emotional, or physical abuse issues).
Other program components may be provided, such as personal
hygiene, recreation, community awareness, arts and crafts, and social
activities designed to improve interpersonal skills and family mental health.
Although these other services may be provided, they are not the primary focus
of treatment.
(3)
Evaluation services to determine need for day treatment prior to program
admission. For persons for whom clarification is needed to determine whether
day treatment is an appropriate therapy approach, or for persons who do not
clearly meet admission criteria, an evaluation service may be performed.
Evaluation services shall be individual and family evaluation activities made
available to courts, schools, other agencies, and individuals upon request, who
assess, plan, and link individuals with appropriate services. This service must
be completed by a mental health professional. An evaluation from another source
performed within the previous 12 months or sooner if there has not been a
change may be substituted. Medicaid will not make separate payment for these
services under the day treatment program.
(4) Assessment services. All day treatment
patients will receive a formal, comprehensive biopsychosocial assessment of day
treatment needs including, if applicable, a diagnostic impression based on the
current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. An assessment
from another source performed within the previous 12 months may be used if the
symptomatology is the same as 12 months ago. If not, parts of the assessment
which reflect current functioning may be used as an update. Using the
assessment, a comprehensive summation will be produced, including the findings
of all assessments performed. The summary will be used in forming a treatment
plan including treatment goals. Indicators for discharge planning, including
recommended follow-up goals and provision for future services, should also be
considered, and consistently monitored.
(5) The day treatment program may include an
educational component as an additional service. The patient's educational needs
shall be served without conflict from the day treatment program. Hours in which
the patient is involved in the educational component of the day treatment
program are not included in the day treatment hours billable to
Medicaid.
d.
Admission criteria. Admission criteria for day treatment services for
persons aged 20 or under shall reflect the following clinical indicators:
(1) The patient is at risk for exclusion from
normative community activities or residence.
(2) The patient exhibits psychiatric
symptoms, disturbances of conduct, decompensating conditions affecting mental
health, severe developmental delays, psychological symptoms, or chemical
dependency issues sufficiently severe to bring about significant or profound
impairment in day-to-day educational, social, vocational, or interpersonal
functioning.
(3) Documentation is
provided that the traditional outpatient setting has been considered and has
been determined not to be appropriate.
(4) The patient's principal caretaker
(family, guardian, foster family or custodian) must be able and willing to
provide the support and monitoring of the patient, to enable adequate control
of the patient's behavior, and must be involved in the patient's treatment.
Persons aged 20 or under who have reached the age of majority, either by age or
emancipation, are exempt from family therapy involvement.
(5) The patient has the capacity to benefit
from the interventions provided.
e.
Individual treatment
plan. Each patient receiving day treatment services shall have a
treatment plan prepared. A preliminary treatment plan should be formulated
within 3 days of participation after admission, and replaced within 30 calendar
days by a comprehensive, formalized plan utilizing the comprehensive
assessment. This individual treatment plan should reflect the patient's
strengths and weaknesses and identify areas of therapeutic focus. The treatment
goals which are general statements of consumer outcomes shall be related to
identified strengths, weaknesses, and clinical needs with time-limited,
measurable objectives. Objectives shall be related to the goal and have
specific anticipated outcomes. Methods that will be used to pursue the
objectives shall be stated. The plan should be reviewed and revised as needed,
but shall be reviewed at least every 30 calendar days. The treatment plan shall
be developed or approved by a board-eligible or board-certified psychiatrist, a
staff psychiatrist, physician, or a psychologist registered either on the
"National Register of Health Service Providers in Psychology" or the "Iowa
Register of Health Service Providers for Psychology." Approval will be
evidenced by a signature of the physician or health service provider
f.
Discharge criteria.
Discharge criteria for the day treatment program for persons aged 20 or under
shall incorporate at least the following indicators:
(1) In the case of patient improvement:
1. The patient's clinical condition has
improved as shown by symptom relief, behavioral control, or indication of
mastery of skills at the patient's developmental level. Reduced interference
with and increased responsibility with social, vocational, interpersonal, or
educational goals occurs sufficient to warrant a treatment program of less
supervision, support, and therapeutic intervention.
2. Treatment goals in the individualized
treatment plan have been achieved.
3. An aftercare plan has been developed that
is appropriate to the patient's needs and agreed to by the patient and family,
custodian, or guardian.
(2) If the patient does not improve:
1. The patient's clinical condition has
deteriorated to the extent that the safety and security of inpatient or
residential care is necessary.
2.
Patient, family, or custodian noncompliance with treatment or with program
rules exists.
g.
Coordination of
services. Programming services shall be provided in accordance with
the individual treatment plan developed by appropriate day treatment staff, in
collaboration with the patient and appropriate caretaker figure (parent,
guardian, or principal caretaker), and under the supervision of the program
director, coordinator, or supervisor.
The program for each patient will be coordinated by primary
care staff of the community mental health center. A coordinated, consistent
array of scheduled therapeutic services and activities shall comprise the day
treatment program. These may include counseling or psychotherapy, theme groups,
social skills development, behavior management, and other adjunctive therapies.
At least 50 percent of scheduled therapeutic program hours exclusive of
educational hours for each patient shall consist of active treatment that
specifically addresses the targeted problems of the population served. Active
treatment shall be defined as treatment in which the program staff assume
significant responsibility and often intervene.
Family, guardian, or principal caretaker shall be involved
with the program through family therapy sessions or scheduled family components
of the program. They will be encouraged to adopt an active role in treatment.
Medicaid will not make separate payment for family therapy services. Persons
aged 20 or under who have reached the age of majority, either by age or
emancipation, are exempt from family therapy involvement.
Therapeutic activities will be scheduled according to the
needs of the patients, both individually and as a group.
Scheduled therapeutic activities, which may include other
program components as described above, shall be provided at least 3 hours per
week up to a maximum of 15 hours per week.
h.
Stable milieu. The
program shall formally seek to provide a stable, consistent, and cohesive
therapeutic milieu. In part this will be encouraged by scheduling attendance
such that a stable core of patients exists as much as possible. The milieu will
consider the developmental and social stage of the participants such that no
patient will be significantly involved with other patients who are likely to
contribute to retardation or deterioration of the patient's social and
emotional functioning. To help establish a sense of program identity, the array
of therapeutic interventions shall be specifically identified as the day
treatment program. Program planning meetings shall be held at least quarterly
to evaluate the effectiveness of the clinical program. In the program
description, the provider shall state how milieu stability will be
provided.
i.
Chronic mental
illness. Persons aged 18 through 20 with chronic mental illness as
defined by rule
441-24.1 (225C) can
receive day treatment services under this subrule or subrule 78.16(6).
This rule is intended to implement Iowa Code section
249A.4.