6 Pa. Code § 20.32 - Assessment and care management
(a)
Activities. Assessment and care management services include
the following activities:
(1) The assessment
of the status and needs of the caregiver, the carereceiver and the caregiving
environment.
(2) The development
and management of a care plan.
(3)
The reassessment of status and needs every 6 months. Reassessment includes
ongoing casework as problems arise.
(b)
Certification. In
addition to the activities provided for under subsection (a), the area agency
on aging staff person who carries out the assessment shall secure, at the time
of assessment, the signature of the primary caregiver on the certification of
accountability required under §
20.22 (relating to conditions of
participation). This certification shall make reference to the caregiver's
responsibilities, including compliance with restrictions on the reimbursement
of expenses, under the Program and attest to the truth of the information
provided by the caregiver. As a witness, the area agency on aging staff person
completing the assessment shall also sign it. This certification will serve as
the contractual basis for the area agency on aging's reimbursements for the
caregiver's expenses. It may also be used as a basis for the recovery of
reimbursements subsequently determined to be inappropriate under §
20.45 (relating to program
violations and penalties).
(c)
Standards and procedures. Assessment and care management
activities shall be carried out under the following standards and procedures:
(1) In addition to the requirements of this
chapter, the activities of assessment and care management under the Program
shall be carried out in conformity with the general care management procedures
currently in practice with services under Department contracts with area
agencies on aging. This includes efforts by area agencies on aging to conserve
resources by developing and utilizing screening instruments to target
appropriate families for assessment and subsequent services or placement on a
waiting list. Waiting list procedures for the Program will establish the
priority of service and position on the waiting list by rating factors relating
to the status of the carereceiver, the family and the total caregiving
situation to determine the situations of greatest need for agency
intervention.
(2) An assessment
shall be completed on each caregiver family using the current form established
by the Department. The assessment provides for the collection of information
concerning the caregiver, the caregiver's burden, the carereceiver and the
caregiving environment.
(3) When
the carereceiver is an older adult, a clinical determination of the functional
dependency of the carereceiver shall be made by the caseworker on the basis of
information obtained on the assessment instrument. Special reference shall be
made to the carereceiver's limitations in carrying out the activities of daily
living, including mobility; the cognitive limitations of the carereceiver; and
the conditions of the caregiving environment that may contribute to the need
for the continuous care or supervision of the carereceiver or increase the
caregiver's burden, or both. If the functional dependency of the carereceiver
cannot be established, the area agency on aging may not serve the caregiver
under the Program.
(4) When the
carereceiver is an adult 59 years of age or younger, the area agency on aging
shall establish the categorical need for the Program by applying the following
provisions:
(i) Through the assessment
process, the area agency on aging shall determine that the history of the onset
of the carereceiver's condition indicates an identifiable decline in
intellectual function resulting in a cognitive impairment that is severe enough
to interfere with work or social activities, or both, and requires the
continuous care or supervision of the caregiver.
(ii) The area agency on aging shall require
the presentation of written documentation from a physician, or team of
physicians, that a medical diagnosis which meets the following minimum criteria
indicates that the carereceiver has a chronic dementia such as Alzheimer's
Disease:
(A) It shall document, to the extent
possible, that the carereceiver has suffered a decline in intellectual
function.
(B) It shall document
through the use of a mental status examination or a neuropsychological
examination that there is a global loss of cognitive function. Global loss of
cognitive function includes memory impairment, the impairment of
visio-constructive abilities and at least one of the following:
(I) Impairment of abstract
thinking.
(II) Impairment of
judgment.
(III) Impairment of other
complex capabilities, such as language use, the ability to perform complex
physical tasks, the ability to recognize objects or people or the ability to
construct objects.
(IV) A
personality change.
(C)
It shall document testing to establish that the carereceiver was, at the time
of diagnosis, in a state of clear consciousness and that other mental states
such as acute or subacute delirium, sleep, coma, stupor and intoxication were
considered and ruled out. It shall document clinical tests that were
administered to insure that the patient's cognitive impairment is not due to
delirium alone and is not due to a reversible loss of cognitive
function.
(d)
Staff resources.
(1) Assessments and care management shall be
carried out by staff persons who meet or exceed the minimum experience and
training qualifications for the caseworker classification of the Pennsylvania
State Civil Service System.
(2)
Consistency in the assignment of casework staff to the Program is required.
While this consistency may be achieved with different combinations of shared or
dedicated staff, at a minimum, assignments shall provide for the development
over time of special staff expertise in the unique aspects of the Program. How
the area agency on aging intends to achieve and maintain this staff expertise
shall be discussed in the plan required under §
20.12 (relating to administrative
functions and responsibilities of area agencies on aging).
(3) Each area agency on aging is required to
secure the consultation services of a person experienced in rehabilitation
technology to provide consultation, as appropriate, on the agency's home
environment assessments, to help determine if special expertise is needed to
assess specific situations (for example, from a rehabilitation engineer), to
identify all available resources for responding to the carereceiver's need for
home modifications and assistive devices and how project resources should be
utilized for this purpose; and to provide technical assistance to case managers
for assessing home environments.
(4) Area agencies on aging shall take special
precaution and require disclosure of potential conflicts of interest when using
the services of consultants; for example, a consultant who owns, or is employed
by, a medical supply company. If a consultant who has a potential conflict of
interest is used as a consultant for a specific caregiver case, the area agency
on aging shall insure that the arrangement for the consultation precludes the
purchase of a recommended item from the consultant.
Notes
This section cited in 6 Pa. Code § 20.12 (relating to administrative functions and responsibilities of area agencies on aging); 6 Pa. Code § 20.21 (relating to eligibility for Program benefits); 6 Pa. Code § 20.22 (relating to conditions of participation); and 6 Pa. Code § 20.33 (relating to benefits counseling).
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