24 Miss. Code. R. 2-30.3 - Medical Supervised Living
A. Medical
Supervised Living is not a separate service from Supervised Living Services but
allows an increased reimbursement rate for persons enrolled in ID/DD Waiver
with significant medical needs. Additional eligibility requirements for persons
who receive this level of support and requirements for Supervised Living
settings to receive the increased reimbursement rate are outlined in this
section. Rule
30.1 - Supervised Living Services for
Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities Service Components and Chapter 13 for
Health, Environment, and Safety for Supervised Living Services for People with
Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities, applies to Medical Supervised
Living.
B. Medical Supervised
Living provides additional support for people with chronic physical or medical
condition(s) requiring prolonged dependency on medical treatment for which
skilled nursing intervention is necessary. Medical Supervised Living cannot be
received unless the person requires frequent nursing oversight to include a
minimum of monthly nursing assessments by a RN.
C. To provide Medical Supervised Living, a
provider must first be approved to do so by DMH. The following must be
submitted through the Division of Certification:
1. Documentation and procedures to ensure a
RN will conduct all Nursing Assessments and develop all Nursing Care
Plans.
2. Documentation and
procedures describing how nursing staff will provide coverage 24 hours per day,
seven (7) days per week in order to respond to the person's medical needs and
requests for assistance/information from staff in the home. Documentation must
include a copy of the nurse's current license to provide nursing
care.
D. Documentation
supporting that the person requires the level of support offered in Medical
Supervised Living is gathered by the Supervised Living Services provider and
Support Coordinator or Transition Coordinator and submitted to DMH for
eligibility determination.
E.
Criteria to support Medical Supervised Living include the following:
1. The person's physical or medical condition
may be characterized by one (1) of the following:
(a) A condition that requires medical
supervision and physician treatment consultation.
(b) The need for administration of
specialized treatments that are medically necessary such as, injections, wound
care for decubitus ulcers, etc.
(c)
Dependency on medical technology requiring nursing oversight such as, enteral
(feeding tube) or parenteral (intravenous tube) nutrition support (bolus
feedings only) or continuous oxygen.
(d) The administration of specialized
treatments that are ordered by a physician or nurse practitioner.
(e) Other medical support needs that are
approved by DMH.
2.
Medical Supervised Living will not be approved unless the person requesting
this service requires frequent nursing oversight to include a minimum of
monthly nursing assessments.
F. People living in the home with someone
considered medically fragile must be compatible and not pose a threat to the
person who has higher medical support needs.
G. Pre-Admission Requirements for Medical
Supervised Living
1. For people moving from
home or already receiving Supervised Living Services, the agency provider must
arrange for a nursing assessment to be conducted by a RN before or the same day
the person is admitted to the home. At a minimum, the following systems must be
addressed:
(a) Integument;
(b) Head;
(c) Eyes and Vision;
(d) Ears and Hearing;
(e) Nose and Sinus;
(f) Mouth;
(g) Neck;
(h) Thorax, Lungs, and Abdomen;
(i) Extremities;
(j) Risk for falls; and
(k) Special Diet Requirements.
The nursing assessment by the RN must result in a Nursing Care Plan and must be updated every 60 days or as needed.
2. For people moving from an
institution, the agency provider's RN must review the nursing assessment from
the institution and develop the Nursing Care Plan. The nurse may choose to
conduct an on-site nursing assessment.
H. Employee Training
1. If a person is already receiving
Supervised Living Services and is approved for Medical Supervised Living,
employees must be trained by the provider's RN or LPN regarding that person's
individual support needs as there must have been a change that necessitated the
transition to Medical Supervised Living.
2. If a person is moving into a Medical
Supervised Living arrangement from home or an institution, employees must be
trained about the person's support needs before admission to the home. This can
be accomplished by a nurse (RN or LPN), nurse practitioner, or a physician.
Others who know the person's support needs well (e.g., family member[s], other
caregivers the person has, etc.) may also provide information.
3. Documentation of employee training,
regardless of if a person is moving into the home or already lives in the home,
must be in their record. The documentation must be signed and dated by the
person receiving the training, as well as the person providing the
training.
I. Additional
Documentation Requirements for Medical Supervised Living
1. The RN must provide the level of oversight
and monitoring necessary to determine the implementation and efficacy of the
strategies in the nursing assessment/Nursing Care Plan.
2. There must be at least monthly nursing
notes and monthly assessments from a RN that include:
(a) A summary of all visits/contacts related
to the person's physical or medical condition(s).
(b) A description of the person's current
physical medical status.
(c) The
status of any physician's orders (new orders, discontinued orders, etc.),
status of laboratory or diagnostic tests, specialist evaluations, medical
appointments, medications, treatment, and/or equipment.
3. The skilled nursing services provided and
the person's response to the interventions.
J. Additional Requirements
1. Agency providers of Medical Supervised
Living must have a nurse (RN or LPN) on-call 24 hours a day, seven (7) days a
week to respond to requests for assistance/information from employees in the
home. If an LPN is on call, a RN must be available for consultation or
assistance, as needed.
2. LPNs can
provide daily nursing care.
K. Ongoing Review of Need for Medical
Supervised Living
1. DMH will review the need
for ongoing Medical Supervised Living at least annually before
recertification.
2. All required
documentation must be sent in a complete manner to the Support Coordinator
within 90 days of the person's recertification date; partial submissions will
not be accepted. The Support Coordinator will submit the information to DMH.
The following information is required:
(a)
Nurse's notes from the previous two (2) months;
(b) Nursing assessments from the previous two
(2) months;
(c) Current Nursing
Care Plan;
(d) Relevant information
from other agency providers (home health, day service, etc.); and
(e) Rationale for the need for continued
Medical Supervised Living.
L. Short-Term Medical Supervised Living
1. A person can receive Medical Supervised
Living on a short-term basis (60 days) in order to recover from an illness or
procedure because of the need for more intensive medical care than can be
provided in traditional Supervised Living/Shared Supported Living/Supported
Living Services.
2. The need for
short-term Medical Supervised Living will be evaluated by DMH. The following
must be submitted to the Support Coordinator for submission to DMH before
short-term Medical Supervised Living can be authorized.
(a) Physician/Specialty evaluation notes
(agency provider/family responsibility).
(b) Discharge Plan (agency provider/family
responsibility).
(c) Other
information deemed relevant to support the continued need for the
service.
3. Short-Term
Medical Supervised Living beyond the initial 60 days can be requested. The need
will be re-evaluated by DMH. The following must be submitted to the Support
Coordinator for submission to DMH within two (2) weeks before the end of the
first 60 day stay:
(a) Estimated number of
additional days needed;
(b)
Justification for the additional days;
(c) Nurse's notes since the beginning of the
stay;
(d) Nursing
assessments;
(e) Nursing Care Plan;
and
(f) Any information from home
health, therapists, or other agency providers who may have delivered services
to the person.
Notes
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