S.D. Admin. R. 67:54:07:01 - Definitions
Terms used in this chapter mean:
(1) "Case management services," services
which are provided on behalf of a client; which are provided by professional
staff, such as a case manager, psychologist, or nurse; and which are designed
to move the client towards the goals specified in the client's TBI
rehabilitation service plan;
(2)
"Cognitive training," services provided in a face-to-face encounter with the
client which provide instruction and training in perception, judgment, and
language and physical, social-emotional, vocation, and independent living
skills;
(3) "Interdisciplinary
team," a team from the TBI service provider which is responsible for
identifying a client's needs and establishing a TBI rehabilitation service
plan;
(4) "Preplacement
assessment," an evaluation of a client in the areas of cognition, perception,
language, physical, social-emotional, vocational, and independent living
functions to ensure that TBI services are necessary for the individual to
develop the skills to live or work independently in the community;
(5) "Residential setting," the individual's
place of residence, which does not include a hospital, penal institution,
detention center, school, nursing facility, intermediate care facility for the
mentally retarded, or an institution which treats individuals for mental
diseases;
(6) "TBI rehabilitation
service plan," a written plan which is based on the client's preplacement
assessment and contains the specific goals, objectives, and services needed to
rehabilitate and move the client into a community independent living or working
situation;
(7) "TBI service
provider" or "provider," a private organization or a special unit within a
facility which provides TBI services under this chapter and is certified by the
Department of Human Services as an adjustment training center;
(8) "Traumatic brain injury" or "TBI," damage
to living brain tissue which is characterized by altered consciousness,
amnesia, paralysis, coma, sensory loss, or cognitive deficits and which impairs
an individual's mental or psychosocial abilities;
(9) "Traumatic brain injury services,"
comprehensive rehabilitation services which are provided in a residential
setting or in a community rehabilitation program on a short-term basis, usually
not more than 24 months, which are delivered to eligible individuals who no
longer demonstrate the need for acute medical care or intensive rehabilitation
and whose rehabilitation service plan substantiates the continuing benefit of
and the need for specialized services, and which are designed to assist a
client to acquire or improve cognition, perception, language, physical,
social-emotional, vocational, and independent living skills necessary to
function independently at home, on the job, and in the community; and
(10) "Utilization review team," a team
consisting of at least two rehabilitation professionals who have experience or
knowledge of head trauma such as a physician, a certified rehabilitation
counselor from the Department of Human Services, a neuropsychologist, and
occupational therapist, a physiatrist, or a psychologist.
Notes
General Authority: SDCL 28-6-1.
Law Implemented: SDCL 28-6-1.
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