Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 0940-03-09-.03 - DEFINITIONS
(1) "Chemical restraint" means a medication
that is prescribed to restrict the service recipient's freedom of movement for
the control of extreme violent physical behavior. Chemical restraints are
medications used in addition to, or in replacement of, the service recipient's
regular drug regimen to control extreme violent physical behavior. The
medications that comprise the service recipient's regular medical regimen
(including PRN medications) are not considered chemical restraints, even if
their purpose is to treat ongoing behavioral symptoms.
(2) "Conservator" means a person appointed by
a court under the conservatorship laws in Title 34, Chapter 3, Tenn. Code Ann.
or the Uniform Veterans' Guardianship Law in Title 34, Chapter 5, Tenn. Code
Ann. with authority to make decisions for an adult who lacks capacity to make
informed health care decisions.
(3)
"Custodian" means an agency or individual appointed by a juvenile court to have
full control of a service recipient who is a child.
(4) "Durable power of attorney for health
care" means a legal document authorized by Title 34, Chapter 6, Part 2, Tenn.
Code Ann. that allows the attorney-in-fact to make decisions for health
care.
(5) "Emergency safety
situation" means service recipient behavior that places the service recipient
or others at serious threat of violence or injury or significant destruction of
property, if the process of destroying the property puts the service recipient
or persons nearby in danger, if no intervention occurs and calls for the use of
isolation, mechanical restraint, or physical holding restraint.
(6) "Guardian" means a person appointed by a
court under Title 34, Chapter 2, Tenn. Code Ann. with authority to make
decisions for a person under eighteen (18) years of age who lacks capacity to
make informed health care decisions.
(7) "Hospital" means a licensed public or
private inpatient treatment resource or hospital or a part of such treatment
resource or hospital that provides inpatient care and treatment for persons
with mental illness or serious emotional disturbance.
(8) "Involuntarily committed service
recipient" means a service recipient who is receiving services on an
involuntary basis under Title 33, Chapter 6, Part 4 or 5, Tenn. Code Ann.,
T.C.A. §§ 33-3-401-403, 412, 607, 33-7-301 and 303, or
37-1-128.
(9) "Isolation" means the
confinement of a service recipient alone in a room or an area where the service
recipient is physically prevented from leaving. This definition is not limited
to instances in which a service recipient is confined by a locked or closed
door. Isolation does not include:
(a) the
segregation of a service recipient for the purpose of managing biological
contagion consistent with the Centers for Disease Control Guidelines;
(b) confinement to a locked unit or ward
where other service recipients are present. Isolation is not solely confinement
of a service recipient to an area, but separation of the service recipient from
other persons; or
(c) time-out, a
behavior management procedure in which the opportunity for positive
reinforcement is withheld, contingent upon the demonstration of undesired
behavior. Time-out may involve the voluntary separation of an individual
service recipient from others.
(10) "Licensed practitioner" means an
individual approved by the mental health residential treatment facility to
order the use of isolation or mechanical restraint and who is licensed by the
Tennessee Health Related Boards as a:
(a)
physician (medical doctor or doctor of osteopathy);
(b) certified nurse practitioner;
(c) physician assistant;
(d) nurse with a master's degree in nursing
who functions as a psychiatric nurse;
(e) psychologist with health service provider
designation;
(f) licensed
professional counselor;
(g) senior
psychological examiner;
(h)
licensed marriage and family therapist;
(i) licensed clinical social worker;
or
(j) licensed psychological
examiner.
(11)
"Mechanical restraint" means the application of a mechanical device, material,
or equipment attached or adjacent to the service recipient's body, including
ambulatory restraints, which the service recipient cannot easily remove and
that restrict freedom of movement or normal access to the service recipient's
body. Mechanical restraint does not include the use of:
(a) restrictive devices or manual methods
employed by a law enforcement agent or other public safety officer to maintain
custody, detention, or public safety during the transport of a service
recipient under the jurisdiction of the criminal justice system or juveniles
with charges in the juvenile justice system;
(b) restraints for medical immobilization,
adaptive support, or medical protection; or
(c) restrictive devices administratively
ordered to ensure the safety of the service recipient or others when an
involuntary committed service recipient must be
transported.
(12) "Mental
health personnel" means a staff member who operates under the direct
supervision of a licensed practitioner.
(13) "Physical holding restraint" means the
use of body contact by staff with a service recipient to restrict freedom of
movement or normal access to his or her body. Physical holding restraint does
not include the use of:
(a) physical touch
associated with prompting, comforting or assisting that does not prevent the
service recipient's freedom of movement or normal access to his or her
body;
(b) physical escort for the
temporary touching or holding of the hand(s), wrist(s), arm(s), shoulder(s) or
back for the purpose of inducing the service recipient to walk to a safe
location; or
(c) physical
intervention for the temporary holding of the hand(s), wrist(s), arm(s),
shoulder(s), or leg(s) which does not otherwise restrict freedom of movement or
access to one's body, for the purpose of terminating unsafe
behavior.
(14) "PRN"
means authorization written to allow a medication or treatment to be given on
an as-needed basis.
(15)
"Seclusion" means "Isolation."
(16)
"Service recipient," for purposes of this chapter, means an individual
receiving mental health residential treatment services.
(17) "Temporary caregiver" means an
individual designated under T.C.A. §
34-6-302 to make decisions as
specified in §
34-6-304 for a minor child as
assigned by the parent or parents on the form provided by the Department of
Children's Services for this purpose.
Notes
Authority: T.C.A. §§ 4-4-103, 4-5-202 and 204, 33-1-302, 305, 309, 33-3-120; 42 C.F.R. §483.358(a).
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