N.D. Admin Code 75-09.1-03-04 - Admission criteria
Before a clinically managed high-intensity residential care program may admit a client, the client shall:
1. Meet diagnostic criteria for a substance
dependence disorder of the DSM; and
2. Meet admission criteria for clinically
managed high-intensity residential services also known as ASAM level III.5 in
each of the six ASAM dimensions. Specifically, the client must:
a. Not be in need of detoxification from
alcohol or drugs or have no signs or symptoms of withdrawal or withdrawal needs
can be safely managed by the program;
b. Not have a physical condition or
complication impacting immediate safety and well-being or requiring
twenty-four-hour medical or nursing interventions and be capable of
self-administering any prescribed medications;
c. Not have an emotional, behavioral, or
cognitive condition or complication impacting immediate safety and well-being
or requiring twenty-four-hour medical or nursing interventions unless the
client is in a dual diagnosis program but may require a residential program
because of sufficiently severe functional deficits to maintain abstinence or
mental stability or both;
d. Have
a low readiness to change as evidenced by a lack of awareness of the need for
treatment characterized by active or passive resistance to treatment; marked
difficulty understanding the relationship between the substance use and life
problems; require a structured therapy and a twenty-four-hour programmatic
milieu to promote treatment progress and recovery; or require repeated,
structured motivational interventions delivered in a twenty-four-hour milieu;
e. Have a higher readiness to
change but issues in other dimensions impair the client's ability to translate
this into treatment progress and recovery;
f. Have a high relapse, continued use, or
continued problem potential as evidenced by the lack of recognition of relapse
triggers or the lack of commitment to continuing care or both; the inability to
control use of alcohol or other drugs or antisocial behavior with the attendant
probability of harm to self or others; symptoms such as drug craving,
difficulty postponing immediate gratification and other drug-seeking behaviors;
or imminent danger of relapse with dangerous emotional, behavioral, or
cognitive consequences because of a crisis situation; and
g. Have a problematic recovery environment
that makes recovery goals assessed as unachievable at a less intensive level of
care as evidenced by a moderately high risk of physical, sexual, or emotional
abuse; substance use so endemic that the client is assessed as unable to
achieve or maintain recovery; a social network of regular users of alcohol or
other drugs; a social network characterized by significant withdrawal and
social isolation; living with an individual who is a regular user, abuser, or
dealer of alcohol and other drugs; the inability to cope for even limited
periods of time outside of twenty-four-hour care; a living environment
characterized by criminal behavior, victimization, and other antisocial norms
and values; or the need for staff monitoring before safe transfer of the client
to a less intensive setting.
Notes
General Authority: NDCC 50-06-16, 50-31
Law Implemented: NDCC 50-31
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No prior version found.