24 Miss. Code. R. 2-32.3 - Program of Assertive Community Treatment Admissions and Discharge
A. In order to be admitted into PACT
Services, people must meet the criteria outlined in this rule.
B. PACT Teams serve people with severe and
persistent mental illness, as listed in the most current edition of the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, that seriously impairs
their functioning in community living. Priority is given to people with
schizophrenia, other psychotic disorders (e.g., schizoaffective disorder), and
bipolar disorder because these illnesses more often cause long-term psychiatric
disability. People with other psychiatric illnesses are eligible, dependent on
the level of the long-term disability. (People with a primary diagnosis of a
substance use disorder, intellectual disability, or personality disorder are
not the intended groups).
C. People
with significant functional impairments as demonstrated by at least one (1) of
the following conditions:
1. Significant
difficulty consistently performing the range of practical daily living tasks
required for basic adult functioning in the community (e.g., caring for
personal business affairs; obtaining medical, legal, and housing services;
recognizing and avoiding common dangers or hazards to self and possessions;
meeting nutritional needs; maintaining personal hygiene) or persistent or
recurrent difficulty performing daily living tasks except with significant
support or assistance from others such as friends, family, or
relatives.
2. Significant
difficulty maintaining consistent employment at a self-sustaining level or
significant difficulty consistently carrying out a homemaking role (e.g.,
household meal preparation, washing clothes, budgeting, or child-care tasks and
responsibilities).
3. Significant
difficulty maintaining a safe living situation (e.g., repeated evictions or
loss of housing).
D.
People must have one (1) or more of the following problems, which are
indicators of continuous high-service needs (i.e., greater than eight [8] hours
per month):
1. High use of acute psychiatric
hospitals (e.g., two [2] or more admissions per year) or psychiatric emergency
services.
2. Intractable (i.e.,
persistent or very recurrent) severe major symptoms (e.g., affective,
psychotic, suicidal).
3. Coexisting
substance use disorder of significant duration (e.g., greater than six [6]
months).
4. High risk or recent
history of criminal justice involvement (e.g., arrest,
incarceration).
5. Significant
difficulty meeting basic survival needs, residing in substandard housing,
homelessness, or in imminent risk of becoming homeless.
6. Residing in an inpatient or supervised
community residence, but clinically assessed to be able to live in a more
independent living situation if intensive services are provided, or requiring a
residential or institutional placement if more intensive services are not
available.
7. Difficulty
effectively utilizing traditional office-based outpatient services.
E. Discharges from the PACT Team
occur when people and agency provider employees mutually agree to the
termination of services. This must occur when people:
1. Have successfully reached established
goals for discharge, and when the person and agency provider employees mutually
agree to the termination of services.
2. Have successfully demonstrated an ability
to function in all major role areas (i.e., work, social, self-care) without
ongoing assistance from the agency provider, without significant relapse when
services are withdrawn, and when the person requests discharge, and the agency
provider employees mutually agree to the termination of services.
3. Move outside the geographic area of the
PACT Team's responsibility. In such cases, the PACT Team must arrange for
transfer of mental health service responsibility to a Program of Assertive
Community Treatment Service or another agency provider wherever the person is
moving. The PACT Team must maintain contact with the person until this service
transfer is implemented. 4. Decline or refuse services and request discharge,
despite the team's best efforts to develop an acceptable Individual Service
Plan with the person.
Notes
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.