12 Va. Admin. Code § 5-80-80 - Responsibilities of the chief medical officer of hospitals
The chief medical officer of a hospital providing newborn services or his designee shall:
1.
Cause all infants to be given a hearing screening test prior to discharge after
birth as appropriate for the level of newborn services provided as defined in
12VAC5-410-443 B
of the Regulations for the Licensure of Hospitals in Virginia.
a. Infants in general or intermediate newborn
services shall have both ears screened at the same time for hearing using
either ABR or OAE testing prior to discharge after birth, but no later than one
month of age.
b. Infants in
neonatal intensive care services who receive this level of newborn service care
for more than five days shall have both ears screened at the same time using
ABR testing prior to discharge after birth or transfer to a lower level of
newborn services. Infants should receive newborn hearing screening as early as
development or medical stability will permit such screening. The hearing
screening performed for infants requiring neonatal intensive care services for
more than five days using ABR testing shall be reported as the initial hearing
screen regardless of whether the infant is transferred to another lower level
of newborn services within the same facility or to another facility.
c. Infants in neonatal intensive care
services who receive this level of newborn service care for five days or less
shall have both ears screened at the same time for hearing using either ABR or
OAE testing prior to discharge after birth, but no later than one month of
age.
2. Identify all
infants who fail hearing screening in one or both ears.
a. Infants who fail hearing screening in one
or both ears using ABR testing shall not be rescreened using OAE testing. These
infants shall be referred for an audiological evaluation.
b. Infants who fail hearing screening in one
or both ears using OAE testing may be rescreened using ABR testing. If the
infant fails subsequent ABR testing in one or both ears, the infant shall be
referred for an audiological evaluation.
3. Identify all infants not receiving an
appropriate hearing screening test.
a. For
infants who did not receive a hearing screening test due to transfer to another
facility, written notification shall be made upon transfer to the health care
provider in charge of the infant's care that testing was not completed. The
hospital discharging the infant after birth is responsible for conducting an
appropriate hearing screening test, except for infants who have been
transferred to a lower level of newborn service care from another facility
providing neonatal intensive care services to that infant for more than five
days.
b. For infants who did not
receive a hearing screening test prior to discharge after birth, inform the
parent prior to discharge of the need for hearing screening and provide a
mechanism by which screening can occur at no additional cost to the
family.
c. For infants who did not
receive screening due to refusal by the parent or guardian because the
screening conflicts with religious convictions, documentation shall be made in
the medical record.
4.
Cause all infants to be assessed for risk indicators associated with hearing
loss prior to discharge after birth as defined in
12VAC5-80-75. For infants who are
found to have one or more risk indicators associated with hearing loss, inform
the parent of the need for a diagnostic audiological assessment by 24 months of
age.
5. Provide written information
to the parent or guardian of each infant that includes purposes and benefits of
newborn hearing screening, risk indicators of hearing loss, procedures used for
hearing screening, results of the hearing screening, recommendations for
further testing, where further testing can be obtained, and contact information
for the Virginia EHDI program;
6.
Notify the infant's primary health care provider within one week of discharge
after birth of (i) the status of the hearing screening including if the infant
was not tested, (ii) procedures used for hearing screening, (iii) identified
risk indicators associated with hearing loss as defined in
12VAC5-80-75,(iv) the results of
the hearing screening, and (v) the recommendations for further testing in
writing or through an electronically secure method that meets all applicable
state and federal privacy laws;
7.
Provide the department with information as required by the board pursuant to
§
32.1-64.1F of
the Code of Virginia and in a manner devised by the department, which may be
electronic, on the hearing screening and risk indicator status of infants born
at their hospital. This information shall be provided within one week of
discharge after birth unless otherwise stated and includes:
a. Demographic information on infants
including name, date of birth, race, ethnicity, and gender;
b. Primary contact information including
address, telephone number, and relationship type;
c. Primary health care provider name,
address, and telephone number;
d.
Risk indicators identified as defined in
12VAC5-80-75;
e. Special circumstances regarding infants as
needed by the department to provide follow-up;
f. Screening methodology used, date screened,
and both right and left ear results;
g. Screening status for pass with risk
indicator, fail, unable to test, refusal, and inconclusive results;
h. Status of infants not screened prior to
discharge that includes infants who were transferred to other facilities and
parents who refused screening;
i.
Hearing rescreening information including date, type of screening methodology
used, results in both left and right ears, and further recommendations within
two weeks after the hospital rescreening date; and
j. Confirmatory data on the status of all
infants born in the hospital facility. The department shall receive
confirmation that infants not reported as passed with risk, failed,
transferred, refused testing, not tested prior to discharge, expired, or other
final disposition have had a negative assessment for risk indicators and that
physiological hearing screening was conducted with passing results in both ears
within 30 days after birth; and
k.
cCMV screening results if performed as defined in
12VAC5-80-150.
8. Report to the department on a
yearly basis hospital specific information including (i) the test procedures
used by the newborn hearing screening program, (ii) the name of the program
director, (iii) the name of the advising audiologist, (iv) equipment
calibration records, (v) screening protocols, and (vi) referral
procedures;
9. Develop written
policies and procedures to implement hearing screening in the chief medical
officer's facility in accordance with 12VAC5-80 including separate protocols
for specialty and subspecialty newborn services; and
10. Ensure that training of staff on newborn
hearing screening test procedures, follow-up, and reporting requirements is
implemented in a way that an adequately trained and knowledgeable workforce is
maintained to conduct hearing screening program requirements.
Notes
Statutory Authority: § 32.1-64.1 of the Code of Virginia.
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