22 Tex. Admin. Code § 224.9 - The Medication Aide Permit Holder
(a) An
RN may delegate to medication aides the administration of medication to clients
in correctional health, long term care facilities, home health agencies, and
other facilities as authorized by law if:
(1)
the medication aide holds a valid permit issued by the appropriate state agency
to administer medications in that facility or agency;
(2) the RN assures that the medication aide
functions in compliance with the laws and regulations of the agency issuing the
permit; and
(3) the route of
administration is oral, via a permanently placed feeding tube, sublingual or
topical including eye, ear or nose drops and vaginal or rectal
suppositories.
(b) The
following tasks may not be delegated to the Medication Aide Permit Holder
unless allowed and in compliance with Chapter 225 of this title (relating to RN
Delegation to Unlicensed Personnel and Tasks not Requiring Delegation in
Independent Living Environments for Clients with Stable and Predictable
Conditions):
(1) calculation of any
medication doses except for measuring a prescribed amount of liquid medication
and breaking a tablet for administration, provided the RN has calculated the
dose;
(2) administration of the
initial dose of a medication that has not been previously administered to the
client;
(3) administration of
medications by an injectable route except as permitted in independent living
environments for administration of insulin as outlined in §225.12
(relating to Delegation of Insulin or Other Injectable Medications Prescribed
in the Treatment of Diabetes Mellitus);
(4) administration of medications used for
intermittent positive pressure breathing or other methods involving medication
inhalation treatments in independent living environments except as permitted in
§225.10(10)(F) (relating to Tasks That May Be Delegated);
(5) administration of medications by way of a
tube inserted in a cavity of the body in independent living environments except
as permitted in §225.10(10)(A) (relating to Tasks That May be
Delegated);
(6) responsibility for
receiving verbal or telephone orders from a physician, dentist, or podiatrist;
and
(7) responsibility for ordering
a client's medication from the pharmacy.
Notes
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