Or. Admin. Code § 411-045-0080 - Provision of Services
(1) PACE
Services:
(a) PACE covered services for all
participants must be the same regardless of the source of payment. They must
include all OHP covered services specified in OAR
410-141-0480 and Medicare
covered services. In addition the covered services must include the following:
(A) Interdisciplinary assessment and
treatment planning;
(B) Case
management and social work services;
(C) Personal care and supportive
services;
(D) Nutritional
counseling;
(E) Recreational
therapy;
(F) Meals and nutritional
supplement as appropriate;
(G)
Community based long term care including nursing facility care as appropriate;
and
(H) Other services determined
necessary by the Interdisciplinary Team to improve or maintain the PACE
participants overall health and functioning or to provide pain management and
comfort care.
(b) The
following are non-covered services under PACE:
(A) Any service that is not authorized by the
Interdisciplinary Team, even if it is a covered service, unless it is an
emergency service;
(B) Any service
listed in OAR 410-141-0500 Excluded Services
and Limitations as described in
410-120-1200, or in the
individual DMAP Provider Guides;
(C) Any service that is excluded under the
Oregon Health Plan unless it is a covered service under
42 CFR 460.92
or Medicare;
(D) Excluded services
listed in
42 CFR 460.96;
and
(c) The PACE program must operate at least
one PACE center either in or contiguous to its defined service area, with
sufficient capacity to allow routine attendance by PACE participants. The
frequency of attendance at a PACE Center is determined by the Interdisciplinary
Team and is to be based on the needs and preferences of each
participant.
(d) A PACE program
must ensure accessible and adequate services to meet the needs of its
participants.
(e) The PACE program
must establish an Interdisciplinary Team at each PACE Center to comprehensively
assess and develop a written care plan to furnish care that meets the needs of
each participant in all care settings 24 hours a day, every day of the
year.
(f) Each PACE Center must
employ at a minimum a half-time physician and a full-time Center Manager,
Registered Nurse and Social Worker with a Master's degree before they may add a
Nurse Practitioner, Physician Assistant, Licensed Practical Nurse or Social
Worker with a Bachelor degree.
(g)
The Interdisciplinary Team members must have appropriate licensure for their
respective disciplines within the state. One year's experience in working with
the elderly or in caregiving is required with exceptions approved by the
Department.
(h) Personal care
attendants, who are not Certified Nursing Assistants, must be enrolled in a
Department approved training program within the service area within 6 months of
hire and complete the program within 12 months of hire.
(i) The Interdisciplinary Team is responsible
for the initial assessment, periodic reassessments, care plan, and coordination
of 24 hour care delivery.
(A) The initial
assessment must be completed within 10 working days following
enrollment.
(B) The
Interdisciplinary Team must consolidate their individual assessments into a
care plan within 10 working days following enrollment.
(C) The appropriate Interdisciplinary Team
members must update the care plan within 5 working days following a significant
change in the participant's health status or at the request of the participant
or the participant's representative.
(D) The Interdisciplinary Team members
actively involved in the participant's care plan must conduct an in-person
reassessment and revise the care plan with the participant and the
participant's representative or caregiver at least semiannually, and meet with
the members of the Interdisciplinary Team and update the care plan as needed.
To the extent it is appropriate, the participant and the participant's
representative or caregiver shall be involved in establishing the participant's
goals.
(E) The Interdisciplinary
Team must implement, coordinate and monitor the effectiveness of the care plan
and, as appropriate, involve the participant and the participant's
representative in care conferences or family meetings when there are issues or
changes in the care plan.
(F) The
care plan must specify the care needed to meet the participant's medical,
physical, emotional and social needs as identified in the individual
assessments. The team must document the care plan and any changes made to it in
the participant's clinical record.
(2) Health Care:
(a) PACE programs will have written policies
and procedures that ensure the provision of all medically and dentally
appropriate care and covered services, including urgent and emergency services,
preventive services and ancillary services included in the PACE contract with
the Department. PACE programs must communicate these policies and procedures to
PACE staff and contracted providers, regularly monitor compliance with these
policies and procedures, and take any corrective action necessary to ensure
compliance. PACE programs must document all monitoring and corrective action
activities.
(b) The PACE program
must maintain a provider panel sufficient to ensure adequate capacity and
expertise to provide timely and appropriate access to covered
services.
(c) PACE programs must
ensure that all providers providing services to PACE participants are
credentialed upon initial contract with the PACE program and re-credentialed no
less frequently than biennially thereafter. This process must include a review
and determination based on the results of the PACE program's quality
improvement activities.
(d) The
credentialing and re-credentialing process must include review of any
information in the National Practitioner Databank; and
(A) A determination, based on the
requirements of the discipline or profession, that providers have current
licensure in the state in which they practice or appropriate certification;
and
(B) Applicable hospital
privileges; and
(C) Appropriate
malpractice insurance.
(e) The PACE program may elect to contract
for or to delegate responsibility for this process but the PACE program will
retain responsibility for delegated activities, including oversight of the
following processes:
(A) PACE programs must
ensure that services are provided within the scope of license or certification
of the provider or facility, and that providers are appropriately supervised
according to their scope of practice;
(B) PACE programs, or their delegated agent,
must maintain records documenting academic credentials, training received,
licenses or certifications of staff and facilities used, and reports from the
National Practitioner Data Bank;
(C) PACE programs must not refer PACE
participants to or use providers who have been suspended or terminated from the
Division of Medical Assistance Programs or excluded as Medicare/Medicaid
providers by CMS or convicted of criminal offenses against Medicare, Medicaid,
or Title XX of the Social Security Act or related state law by any lawful court
in this state. PACE programs must not accept billings for services to PACE
participants provided after the date of such providers suspension or
termination or conviction.
(f) PACE programs must have written
procedures that allow for choice of a Primary Care Provider (PCP) for physical
health within the PACE program's PCPs or contracted providers. Information
about which PCPs are not accepting new patients will be provided by the PACE
program to potential PACE participants.
(g)
(A)
PACE programs must ensure a newly enrolled PACE participant receives timely,
adequate and appropriate health care services necessary to establish and
maintain the health of the PACE participant. PACE programs must coordinate
services for PACE participants who require services from agencies providing
non-covered services. The PCP will arrange, coordinate, and monitor all
medical, mental health, and dental care for that PACE participant on an ongoing
basis.
(B) A PACE program's
liability covers the period between the participant's enrollment and
disenrollment with the PACE program, unless the participant is hospitalized at
the time of disenrollment. In such an event, the PACE program is responsible
for the participant in accordance with its contract with the Department. The
PACE program must have written procedures that describe how it will comply with
this obligation.
(h) The
PACE program must identify the training needs of its provider panel and PACE
staff and address such needs to improve the ability of the providers and staff
to deliver covered services within the PACE program.
(3) Emergency and Urgent Care Services:
(a) PACE programs must have written policies
and procedures and monitoring systems that ensure the provision of appropriate
urgent care, emergency, and triage services 24-hours a day, 7-days-a-week for
all PACE participants. PACE programs must communicate these policies and
procedures to their staff and contracted providers; regularly monitor
compliance with these policies and procedures and take any corrective action
necessary to ensure provider compliance. PACE programs must document all
monitoring and corrective action activities.
(b) PACE programs must have written policies
and procedures and monitoring processes to ensure that urgent or emergency
calls are responded to appropriately. These policies should address the
following elements:
(A) The maintenance of
24-hour telephone coverage (not a recording) either onsite or through call
sharing or an answering service, adequate to triage urgent care and emergency
calls from PACE participants;
(B)
The standards for call-back for emergency or urgent care, routine problems, and
the provision of interpretive services after office hours. Urgent calls will be
returned appropriate to the participant's condition but in no event more than
30 minutes after receipt. If information is not adequate to determine if the
call is urgent, the call will be returned within 60 minutes to fully assess the
nature of the call. If information is adequate to determine the call may be
emergent in nature, the call must be returned immediately;
(C) Provisions for notifying other providers
requesting approval to treat a PACE participant, including emergency
departments;
(D) Provisions to
ensure that relevant information is entered into the appropriate clinical
record of the PACE participant regardless of who responds to the call or the
time of day the call is received. PACE programs must monitor for compliance
with this requirement;
(E) Written
procedures and trained staff to communicate with hearing impaired PACE
participants via TDD/TTY or Relay Service, and with limited English proficient
PACE participants;
(F) Telephone
coverage at PACE program centers and administrative offices that will permit
access to administrative staff during normal office hours, including lunch
hours, and have assigned administrative staff available for emergencies after
hours and on weekends; and
(G)
Provisions to monitor compliance with the policies and procedures governing
24-hour telephone coverage and on-call PCP and administrative coverage, take
corrective action as needed, and report findings to the PACE program's Quality
Improvement Committee.
(c) If a screening examination in an
emergency room leads to a clinical determination by the examining physician
that an actual emergency medical condition exists under the prudent layperson
standard as defined in emergency services, the PACE program must pay for all
services required to stabilize the patient. The PACE program may not require
prior authorization for emergency services. The PACE program may not
retroactively deny a claim for an emergency screening examination because the
condition, that appeared to be an emergency medical condition under the prudent
layperson standard, turned out to be non-emergency in nature.
(d) When a PACE participant's PCP, or other
PACE program representative instructs the PACE participant or his or her
representative to seek emergency services, in or out of the network, the PACE
program is responsible for payment of the screening examination and for other
medically appropriate services. The PACE program is responsible for payment of
post-stabilization care that was:
(A)
Pre-authorized by the PACE program; or
(B) Not pre-authorized by the PACE program if
the program (or the on-call provider) failed to respond to a request for
pre-authorization within one hour of the request being made, or the PACE
program or provider on call could not be contacted.
(4) Continuity of Care:
(a) PACE programs must develop and maintain a
formal referral system consisting of a network of consultation and referral
providers, including alternative care settings, for all services covered in
their contract with the Department. PACE programs must ensure that access to
and quality of care provided in all referral settings is monitored. Referral
services and services received in alternative care settings must be reflected
in the PACE participant's clinical record. PACE programs must establish and
follow written procedures for participating and non-participating providers in
the PACE programs referral system. Procedures will include the maintenance of
records within the referral system sufficient to document the flow of referral
requests, approvals and denials in the system.
(b) PACE programs must have written
procedures for referrals that ensure adequate prior notice of the referral to
the referral providers and adequate documentation of the referral in the PACE
participant's clinical record. These procedures must include:
(A) Review of information by the referring
provider;
(B) Entry of information
into the PACE participant's clinical record; and
(C) Monitoring of referrals to ensure that
information, including information pertaining to ongoing referral appointments,
is obtained from the referral providers, reviewed by the referring
practitioner, and entered into the clinical record.
(c) PACE programs must have written
procedures to orient and train their staff and the staff in contracted
alternative care settings in the appropriate use of the urgent and emergency
care systems, and the need to send any documents from emergency care to the
PACE program.
(d) If a PACE
participant is hospitalized in an inpatient or outpatient setting, PACE
programs must ensure that:
(A) A notation is
made in the PACE participant's clinical record of the reason, date, and
expected duration of the hospitalization; and
(B) Upon discharge, a notation is made in the
PACE participant's clinical record of the actual duration of the
hospitalization and follow-up plans, including appointments for provider
visits; and
(C) Pertinent reports
from the hospitalization are entered in the PACE participant's clinical record.
Such reports must include, as applicable, the reports of consulting
practitioner's physical history, psycho-social history, list of medications and
dosages, progress notes, and discharge summary.
(e) For PACE participants living in
residential facilities or homes providing ongoing care, the IDT will work with
the appropriate staff person identified by the facility to ensure that the PACE
participant has timely and appropriate access to services according to the PACE
participant's care plan, and to ensure coordination of care provided by the
PACE program and care provided by the facility or home.
(f) For PACE participants living in
residential facilities or homes providing ongoing care, PACE programs will
provide medications in a manner that is compatible with the appropriate
medication dispensing system of the facility, that meets state dispensing laws.
PACE programs must provide emergency prescriptions on a 24-hour
basis.
(g) When a PACE
participant's care is being transferred from the PACE program to the PACE
participant's new health care provider, the PACE program will make every
reasonable effort within the laws governing confidentiality to coordinate
transfer of the PACE participant into the care of the new provider.
(h) If a Primary Care Provider (PCP)
terminates the patient/provider relationship, the PACE program will arrange for
the participant to transfer his or her care to another PCP on the PACE
program's panel who will accept the participant as his or her patient. All
terminations of provider/patient relationships must be according to the PACE
program's policies.
(i) PACE
programs must have written procedures and criteria for health education of PACE
participants and their caregivers. Health education will include: information
on specific health care procedures, instruction in self-management of health
care, promotion and maintenance of optimal health care status, patient
self-care, and disease and accident prevention. Health education may be
provided by PACE staff or other individual(s) or program(s) approved by the
PACE program. PACE programs will endeavor to provide health education in a
culturally sensitive manner to communicate most effectively with individuals
from non-dominant cultures.
(5) Long term Care Services:
(a) PACE programs will have written policies
and procedures that ensure the provision of all long term care services
included in the PACE contract with the Department. PACE programs must
communicate these policies and procedures to PACE staff and contracted
providers, regularly monitor compliance with these policies and procedures, and
take any corrective action necessary to ensure compliance. PACE programs must
document all monitoring and corrective action activities.
(b) The PACE program must maintain a provider
panel (either staff or contracted providers) sufficient to ensure adequate
capacity and expertise to provide timely and appropriate access to covered long
term care services.
(c) The PACE
program must identify the training needs of its provider panel and PACE staff
and address such needs to improve the ability of the providers and staff to
deliver covered long term care services under the PACE program.
(d) In addition to Medicare covered services
and the DMAP covered services listed in OAR
411-045-0080(1)(a),
the PACE program is responsible for providing services either directly or
through contracted providers that are licensed pursuant to state law including
but not limited to the following:
(A)
Comprehensive case management;
(C) Home delivered meals;
(E) Non-medical transportation;
(G) Residential Care Facility
Services;
(H) Assisted Living
Facility Services;
(I) Adult Foster
Home Services; and
(J) Nursing
Facility Services.
(e)
If the PACE program's facility is not in compliance with the provisions defined
in OAR 411-066-0000 -
411-066-0020, they must submit a
request to the Administrator of the Department for a variance. This request
will be reviewed by the Administrator of the Department or his or her designee,
and the representatives from the Department assigned to the PACE
program.
(f) When a PACE program
provides community based or long term care for residents outside of a
participant's own residence it must assure that such facilities are licensed by
the state. If the PACE program's facilities are not in compliance with the
licensure requirements for those facilities, the PACE program must submit a
request to the Department for a variance.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 410.090
Stats. Implemented: ORS 410.070
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