Or. Admin. Code § 415-020-0040 - Treatment Services General
(1)
Treatment Services: The Opioid Treatment Program (OTP) shall provide patients
the following services and activities and document the time or manner of each
service or activity in the patient record:
(a)
Dispensing of approved opioid agonist medications;
(b) Individual group, or family counseling,
as clinically indicated;
(c)
Information and training in parenting skills;
(d) HIV, AIDS, tuberculosis, sexually
transmitted diseases, and other infectious disease information;
(e) Completion of HIV, TB, STD risk
assessment within 30 days of admission;
(f) Relapse prevention training;
and
(g) For pregnant patients in a
treatment program who were not admitted under OAR 415-020-0025(5), a treatment
program shall give them the opportunity for prenatal care. If a program cannot
provide direct prenatal care for pregnant patients in treatment, it shall
establish a system of referring them for prenatal care, which may be either
publicly or privately funded. If there is no publicly funded prenatal care
available to which a patient may be referred, and the program cannot provide
such services, or the patient cannot afford or refuses prenatal care services,
then the treatment program shall, at a minimum, offer them basic prenatal
instruction on maternal, physical, and dietary care as a part of its counseling
service.
(2) Community
Resources: The program, to the extent of community resources available and as
clinically indicated, shall provide patients with information and referral to
the following services:
(a) Self-help groups
and other support groups;
(b)
Educational services;
(c)
Recreational programs and activities;
(d) Prevocational, occupational, and
vocational rehabilitation;
(e) Life
skills training;
(f) Legal
services;
(g) Smoking cessation
programs;
(h) Medical
services;
(i) Housing
assistance;
(j) Financial
assistance counseling programs;
(k)
Crisis intervention; and
(l)
Comprehensive drug education.
(3) Non-compliance: Patients who are
non-compliant with program rules may be discharged following medically
supervised withdrawal. Clinical justification for medically supervised
withdrawal schedules of less than 21 days must be documented in the patient
record. For discharges because of failure to pay fees, detoxification periods
of less than 21 days are not permitted.
(4) Testing for Drug Use: The program shall
use observed urine drug screening as an aid in monitoring and evaluating a
patient's progress in treatment. The urine drug screening shall include;
(a) A sensitive, rapid, and inexpensive
immunoassay screen to eliminate "true negative" specimens; and
(b) If the initial test is positive, a
confirmatory test, which is a second analytical procedure used to identify the
presence of a specific drug or metabolite in a urine specimen. The confirmatory
test must be conducted by a different analytical method from that of the
initial test, to ensure reliability and accuracy.
(5) Standards for Urine Tests: All urine
tests shall be performed by laboratories meeting the licensing standards of OAR
333-024-0305 through 333-024-0365.
(6) All urine tests shall, at a minimum,
screen for synthetic opiates, opiates, amphetamines, cocaine, and
benzodiazepines.
(7) Frequency of
urine testing: The OTP must provide adequate testing or analysis for drugs of
abuse, including at least eight random drug abuse tests per year, for each
patient in maintenance treatment, in accordance with generally accepted
clinical practice. More frequent drug testing shall be done if clinically
indicated. The program shall document in the patient record the results of any
tests and interventions made by the program to address those tests which are
positive for illicit substances.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 430.256
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 430.010(4)(b) & 430.560 - 430.590
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.