22 Tex. Admin. Code § 172.2 - Gold Designated Practice
(a) A clinic
may apply to be designated as a "Gold Designated Practice." In order to be
eligible for a "Gold Designated Practice" status, a clinic must:
(1) complete a board-approved application
form;
(2) provide a Medical Home
Agreement, written collaborative, coordinated care agreement or memorandum of
understanding to provide management and treatments of pain, that describes
measures that it provides and may be used for reduction of pain such as, but
not limited to:
(A) multimodal treatment such
as surgery, injections, pain pumps, osteopathic manipulation, epidurals,
trigger point injections, dry needling, and topical creams or
patches;
(B) multi-disciplinary
practices such as medication assisted tapering and weaning, computer-based
training pain coaching, acupuncture, chiropractic, physical therapy, massage,
and exercise/movement; or
(C)
collaborative care or other behavioral health integration services such as
evidenced-based cognitive behavioral therapy interventions for mental health
and pain reduction, medication management and opioid weaning, patient-centered
education, regular monitoring and assessments of clinical status using
validated tools, assessment of treatment adherence, motivational interviewing,
and a structured approach to improving the biopsychosocial aspects of pain
management; and
(3) In
addition to providing a Medical Home Agreement, written collaborative,
coordinated care agreement, or memorandum of understanding to provide
management and treatments of pain described above, the clinic must either:
(A) meet the standards for exemption under
§168.002(7) of the Act, including the clinic being operated by a majority
of physicians who currently hold or previously held ABMS or AOA
board-certification or subspecialty certification in pain management; and
(i) have a majority of physicians performing
or properly supervising delegates in providing other forms of treatment besides
qualifying pain management prescriptions to a majority of the patients at the
clinic;
(ii) utilization by the
clinic's providers of a Medical Home Agreement signed by the primary prescriber
and the patient; or
(iii) have a
written collaborative, coordinated care agreement or a memorandum of
understanding with the patient's primary physician for treating and managing
the patient; or
(B) be a
Certified Pain Management Clinic (PMC) that is operated by physicians who
previously held an ABMS or AOA Board-certification or sub-specialty in pain
management or hold a ABMS or AOA Board-certification in an area that is
eligible for a pain management subspecialty; and
(i) have a Medical Home Agreement signed by
the primary prescriber and the patient; or
(ii) have a written collaborative,
coordinated care agreement or memorandum of understanding providing that each
physician who prescribes qualifying prescriptions will consult with a pain
specialist for the patient.
(b) The designation may be verified by an
initial audit and is valid for five years.
(c) No further audits or inspections will be
conducted during the five-year "Gold Designated Practice" period, unless:
(1) a complaint is received or initiated by
the board concerning operation of the clinic or operators at the
clinic;
(2) the clinic changes
location; or
(3) the clinic's
ownership structure changes to a majority of new owners.
(d) Practices that only treat pain patients
as part of cancer care or that provide only palliative care, hospice, or other
end-of-life care are exempt under the Act from certification requirements as a
PMC, but do not qualify for the "Gold Designated Practice" status.
Notes
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