22 Tex. Admin. Code § 225.4 - Definitions
The following words and terms, when used in this chapter, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Activities of daily
living (ADLs)--limited to the following activities: bathing, dressing,
grooming, routine hair and skin care, meal preparation, feeding, exercising,
toileting, transfer/ambulation, positioning, range of motion, and assistance
with self administered medications. The term does not include more specific
tasks defined as health maintenance activities under paragraph (8) of this
section (relating to Health Maintenance Activities).
(2) Administration of Medications--removal of
an individual/unit dose from a previously dispensed, properly labeled
container; verifying it with the medication order; giving the correct
medication and the correct dose to the proper client at the proper time by the
proper route; and accurately recording the time and dose given.
(3) Assistance with self-administered
medication--any needed ancillary aid provided to a client in the client's
self-administered medication or treatment regimen, such as reminding a client
to take a medication at the prescribed time, opening and closing a medication
container, pouring a predetermined quantity of liquid to be ingested, returning
a medication to the proper storage area, and assisting in reordering
medications from a pharmacy.
(4)
Client--the individual receiving care.
(5) Client's Responsible Adult--an
individual, 18 or older, normally chosen by the client, who is willing and able
to participate in decisions about the overall management of the client's health
care and to fulfill any other responsibilities required under this chapter for
care of the client. The term includes but is not limited to parent, foster
parent, family member, significant other, or legal guardian.
(6) Delegation--means that a registered nurse
authorizes an unlicensed person to perform tasks of nursing care in selected
situations and indicates that authorization in writing. The delegation process
includes nursing assessment of a client in a specific situation, evaluation of
the ability of the unlicensed persons, teaching the task, ensuring supervision
of the unlicensed persons and re-evaluating the task at regular intervals. It
does not include situations in which an unlicensed person is directly assisting
a RN by carrying out nursing tasks in the presence of a RN.
(7) Functional Disability--a mental,
cognitive, or physical disability that precludes the physical performance of
self-care tasks, including health maintenance activities and ADLs.
(8) Health Maintenance Activities
(HMAs)--tasks that may be exempt from delegation based on RN assessment that
enable the client to remain in an independent living environment and go beyond
ADLs because of the higher skill level required to perform. HMAs include the
following:
(A) administering oral medications
that are normally self-administered, including administration through a
permanently placed feeding tube with irrigation;
(B) topically applied medications;
(C) insulin or other injectable medications
prescribed in the treatment of diabetes mellitus administered subcutaneously,
nasally, or via an insulin pump;
(D) unit dose medication administration by
way of inhalation (MDIs) including medications administered as nebulizer
treatments for prophylaxis and/or maintenance;
(E) routine administration of a prescribed
dose of oxygen;
(F) noninvasive
ventilation (NIV) such as continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and
bi-level positive airway pressure (BiPAP) therapy;
(G) the administering of a bowel and bladder
program, including suppositories, enemas, manual evacuation, intermittent
catheterization, digital stimulation associated with a bowel program, tasks
related to external stoma care including but not limited to pouch changes,
measuring intake and output, and skin care surrounding the stoma
area;
(H) routine preventive skin
care and care of Stage 1 pressure ulcers;
(I) feeding and irrigation through a
permanently placed feeding tube inserted in a surgically created orifice or
stoma;
(J) those tasks that an RN
may reasonably conclude as safe to exempt from delegation based on an
assessment consistent with §
225.6 of this title (relating to
RN Assessment of the Client); and
(K) such other tasks as the Board may
designate.
(9)
Independent living environment--A client's individual residence which may
include a home or homelike setting such as the client's home, an entity
licensed or regulated by a state or federal agency or exempt from such
licensure or regulation, (such as a group home, foster home, or assisted living
facility), and includes where the client works, attends school, or engages in
other community activities. The term does not include settings in which nursing
services are continuously provided.
(10) Not Requiring Delegation--a
determination by a RN that the performance of an ADL or HMA may be exempt from
delegation for a particular client and does not constitute the practice of
professional nursing based on criteria established by the Board/this
chapter.
(11) Stable and
predictable--a situation where the client's clinical and behavioral status is
determined to be non-fluctuating and consistent. A stable/predictable condition
involves long term health care needs which are not recuperative in nature and
do not require the regularly scheduled presence of a registered nurse or
licensed vocational nurse. Excluded by this definition are situations where the
client's clinical and behavioral status is expected to change rapidly or in
need of the continuous/continual assessment and evaluation of a registered
nurse or licensed vocational nurse. The condition of clients receiving hospice
care in an independent living environment where deterioration is predictable
shall be deemed to be stable and predictable.
(12) Unlicensed person--an individual, not
licensed as a health care provider:
(A) who
is monetarily compensated to provide certain health related tasks and functions
in a complementary or assistive role to the RN in providing direct client care
or carrying out common nursing functions;
(B) who provides those tasks and functions as
a volunteer but does not qualify as a friend providing gratuitous care for the
sick under §301.004(1) of the Nursing Practice Act;
(C) including, but not limited to, nurse
aides, orderlies, assistants, attendants, technicians, home health aides,
medication aides permitted by a state agency, and other individuals providing
personal care/assistance of health related services; or
(D) who is a professional nursing student,
not licensed as a RN or LVN, providing care for monetary compensation and not
as part of their formal educational program shall be considered to be
unlicensed persons and must provide that care in conformity with this
chapter.
Notes
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