Or. Admin. Code § 411-348-0120 - Medical Services
(1) POLICY AND
PROCEDURE. A program provider must have and implement written policies and
procedures that maintain and protect a child's physical health. The policies
and procedures must address the following:
(a) Child health care needs;
(b) Medication administration;
(c) Medication storage and
disposal;
(d) Response to emergency
medical situations;
(e) Medical
care coordination with the child's health insurance, health care plan coverage,
or health care team as applicable;
(f) Nursing services, if provided;
and
(g) Early detection and
prevention of infectious disease.
(2) HEALTH CARE.
(a) A program provider must ensure a child
receives care that promotes the health and well-being of the child by ensuring
the following:
(A) The child has a primary
physician or health care provider whom the child's parent or guardian has
chosen from among qualified providers. Provisions must be made for a secondary
physician or clinic in the event of an emergency.
(B) The child receives a medical evaluation
by a qualified health care provider no less frequently than annually or as
recommended by a physician.
(C) The
child receives a dental screening exam and oral hygiene care from a dental
clinic annually, or as recommended by a dentist. If the program provider is not
able to identify an available dentist for routine dental care, the program
provider must document ongoing efforts to locate a dentist for the
child.
(D) Coordination with the
in-residence caregiver to monitor the health status and physical conditions of
the child and action in a timely manner in response to identified changes or
conditions that may lead to deterioration or harm.
(E) The child's parent or guardian is
notified as timely as possible when medical attention is sought for the child.
The notification must include the following:
(i) Condition for which medical care was
sought;
(ii) Health care provider's
diagnosis of the child's condition; and
(iii) Treatment and recommended follow up
prescribed by the health care provider.
(b) A written, signed order from a
prescribing physician or qualified health care provider is required prior to
the usage or implementation of all of the following:
(A) Prescription medications;
(B) Non-prescription medications except
over-the-counter topicals;
(C)
Treatment other than basic first aid;
(D) Modified or special diets;
(E) Adaptive equipment; and
(F) Aids to physical functioning.
(c) A program provider,
in-residence caregiver, staff, and alternate caregivers must implement the
order of a physician or qualified health care provider as written.
(d) A program provider must coordinate with
the in-residence caregiver to maintain a medical history on each child to aid
physicians, licensed health professionals, staff, and alternate caregivers in
understanding the medical history of each child. The medical history must
include:
(A) A list of known health
conditions, medical diagnoses, known allergies, and immunizations;
(B) A record of visits to licensed health
professionals that include documentation of the consultation and any therapy
provided; and
(C) A record of known
hospitalizations and surgeries.
(3) MEDICATION.
(a) All medications must be:
(A) Kept in their original
containers;
(B) Labeled by the
dispensing pharmacy, product manufacturer, or physician, as specified per the
written order of a physician or qualified health care provider; and
(C) Kept in a secured, locked container or
stored in a manner that prevents access by children, and stored as indicated by
the product manufacturer.
(b) All medications and treatments must be
recorded on an individualized medication administration record (MAR). The MAR
must include:
(A) The name of the
child;
(B) A transcription of the
written order of a physician or qualified health care provider, including the
brand or generic name of the medication, prescribed dosage, frequency, and
method of administration;
(C) For
topical medications and treatments without the order of a physician or
qualified health care provider, a transcription of the printed instructions
from the package;
(D) Times and
dates of administration or self-administration of the medication;
(E) Signature of the person administering the
medication or the person monitoring the self-administration of the
medication;
(F) Method of
administration;
(G) An explanation
of why a PRN (i.e., as needed) medication was administered;
(H) Documented effectiveness of any PRN
(i.e., as needed) medication administration;
(I) An explanation of any medication
administration irregularity; and
(J) Documentation of any known allergy or
adverse drug reaction.
(c) A program provider must document when a
treatment, medication, therapy, or special diet is not implemented in
accordance with an order from a health care provider, including why the ordered
care was not implemented.
(d) A
program provider, in-residence caregiver, or staff may not use alternative
medications intended to alter or affect a child's mood or behavior, such as
herbals or homeopathic remedies without direction and supervision of a licensed
health care provider.
(e) Any
medication used with the intent to alter a child's behavior must be documented
in the child's ISP and meet the standards set forth in OAR
411-348-0360.
(f) PRN (i.e., as needed) orders are not
allowed for psychotropic medication.
(g) SELF-ADMINISTRATION OF MEDICATION.
(A) The ISP for children who independently
self-administer medications must include a plan for the periodic monitoring and
review of the self-administration of medications.
(B) An in-residence caregiver must ensure
that children able to self-administer medications keep the medications in a
secure, locked container unavailable to other children residing in the Host
Home and store the medications as recommended by the product
manufacturer.
(h)
Safeguards to prevent adverse effects or medication reactions must be utilized
and include:
(A) Whenever possible, obtaining
all prescription medication for a child, except samples provided by a health
care provider, from a single pharmacy which maintains a medication profile for
the child;
(B) Maintaining
information about the desired effects and side effects of each
medication;
(C) Ensuring that
medications prescribed for one child are not administered to, or
self-administered by, another child or staff member; and
(D) Documentation in the child's record of
the reason all medications are not provided through a single pharmacy if
multiple pharmacies are utilized for the same child.
(i) All expired, discontinues, recalled, or
contaminated medications, including over-the-counter medications, may not be
kept in a Host Home and must be disposed of within 10 calendar days of
expiration, discontinuation, or a program provider or in-residence caregiver's
knowledge of a recall or contamination. A program provider must dispose of the
prescription medications for a child who has died within 10 calendar days of
the child's death.
(A) A program provider
must dispose of medications according to the program provider's policy. The
program provider's policy must reflect the medication disposal guidelines
issued by the Department of Environmental Quality.
(B) A program provider must maintain a
written record of the disposal of a medication. The record must include
documentation of the following:
(i) Date of
disposal;
(ii) Description of the
medication, including dosage, strength, and amount being disposed;
(iii) Name of the child for whom the
medication was prescribed;
(iv)
Reason for disposal;
(v) Method of
disposal;
(vi) Signature of the
person disposing of the medication; and
(vii) For controlled medications, the
signature of a witness to the disposal.
(4) NURSING SERVICES. When nursing
services are provided to a child, a program provider must:
(a) Coordinate with a registered nurse and
the child's ISP team to ensure the nursing services being provided are
sufficient to meet the health needs of the child; and
(b) Implement the Nursing Service Plan, or
appropriate portions therein, as agreed upon by the child's ISP team and the
registered nurse.
(5)
DELEGATION AND SUPERVISION OF NURSING TASKS. Nursing tasks must be delegated by
a registered nurse to a program provider, in-residence caregiver, and staff in
accordance with the rules of the Oregon State Board of Nursing in OAR chapter
851, division 047.
(6) A program
provider must immediately notify a child's services coordinator, and document
the notification, when the child's medical, behavioral, or physical needs
change to a point that they may not be met by the program provider.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 409.050, 427.104, 441.715, 443.450 & 443.455
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 427.104, 441.705-441.720, 441.740, 441.745, 443.384, 443.392, 443.400-443.445, 443.450, 443.455, 443.880, 443.881 & 443.991
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