Utah Admin. Code R432-153-16 - Food Services
(1) The facility
shall provide each client with a safe, palatable, well-balanced diet that meets
their daily nutritional and special dietary needs.
(2) There shall be adequate staff employed by
the facility to meet the dietary needs of the clients.
(3) The facility shall employ a dietitian
either full-time, part-time or on a consultant basis.
(a) The dietitian shall be certified in
accordance with Title 58, Chapter 49, Dietitian Certification Act.
(b) If a dietitian is not employed full-time,
the administrator shall designate a full-time person to serve as the dietetic
supervisor.
(c) The dietetic
supervisor shall be available when the consulting dietitian visits the
facility.
(4) Any
personnel who prepares or serves food shall have a current food handler's
permit.
(5) If the facility admits
clients requiring therapeutic or special diets, the facility shall have an
approved dietary manual for reference when preparing meals.
(6) The facility shall develop menus that
meet the nutritional needs of clients. Menus shall be:
(a) prepared in advance;
(b) followed;
(c) have different choices each
day;
(d) posted for each day of the
week;
(e) approved and signed by a
certified dietician; and
(f) cycled
no less than every two weeks.
(7) The facility shall retain documentation
of any substitution to the menu for at least three months.
(8) The facility shall make available for
Department review any food sanitation inspection reports of state or local
health department inspections.
(9)
The facility shall have no more than a 14-hour interval between the evening
meal and breakfast, unless a substantial snack is served in the
evening.
(10) The facility shall
provide special eating equipment and assistive devices for clients who need
them.
(11) The facility shall
maintain a one-week supply of nonperishable staple foods and a three-day supply
of perishable foods to complete the established menu.
(12) The facility may use trained dining
assistants to aid clients in eating and drinking if:
(a) a licensed practical nurse, registered
nurse, advance practice registered nurse, speech pathologist, occupational
therapist, or dietitian has assessed that the client does not have complicated
feeding problems, such as recurrent lung aspirations, behaviors which interfere
with eating, difficulty swallowing, or tube or parenteral feeding;
and
(b) the service agreement
documents that the client needs assistance with eating and drinking and defines
who is qualified to offer the assistance.
(13) If the facility uses a dining assistant,
the facility shall assure that the dining assistant:
(a) has completed a dietary assistant
training course; and
(b) performs
duties only for those clients who do not have complicated feeding
problems.
Notes
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No prior version found.