TITLE 12. HEALTH
Title of Regulation: 12VAC35-105. Rules and
Regulations for Licensing Providers by the Department of Behavioral Health and
Developmental Services (amending 12VAC35-105-20, 12VAC35-105-30,
12VAC35-105-50, 12VAC35-105-120, 12VAC35-105-150, 12VAC35-105-155,
12VAC35-105-160, 12VAC35-105-170, 12VAC35-105-320, 12VAC35-105-330,
12VAC35-105-400, 12VAC35-105-440, 12VAC35-105-450, 12VAC35-105-460,
12VAC35-105-520, 12VAC35-105-580, 12VAC35-105-590, 12VAC35-105-620,
12VAC35-105-650, 12VAC35-105-660, 12VAC35-105-665, 12VAC35-105-675,
12VAC35-105-691, 12VAC35-105-800, 12VAC35-105-830, 12VAC35-105-1140, 12VAC35-105-1250,
12VAC35-105-1360; adding 12VAC35-105-1245).
Statutory Authority: §§ 37.2-302 and 37.2-400 of
the Code of Virginia.
Effective Dates: September 1, 2018, through February 29,
2020.
Agency Contact: Emily Bowles, Legal Coordinator, Office
of Licensing, Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services, 1220
Bank Street, P.O. Box 1797, Richmond, VA 23218, telephone (804) 225-3281, FAX
(804) 692-0066, TTY (804) 371-8977, or email emily.bowles@dbhds.virginia.gov.
Preamble:
Section 2.2-4011 A of the Code of Virginia states that
regulations that an agency finds are necessitated by an emergency situation may
be adopted upon consultation with the Attorney General, which approval shall be
granted only after the agency has submitted a request stating in writing the
nature of the emergency, and the necessity for such action shall be at the sole
discretion of the Governor.
The emergency regulation establishes requirements needed
immediately to address the concerns of health and safety of individuals
receiving services from providers of adult services licensed by the Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services. The purpose of this regulation
is to comply with requirements of the U.S. Department of Justice's Settlement
Agreement with Virginia. The Settlement Agreement includes provisions of
quality and risk management.
This regulatory action addresses several items that have
been cited by the Independent Reviewer as obstacles to compliance with the
provisions of the Settlement Agreement, facilitates the submission of necessary
information by providers after a serious incident occurs and the development of
the required quality and risk management processes, and strengthens case
management services as required by the Settlement Agreement.
Specifically, the amendments (i) enhance the requirements
of providers for establishing effective risk management and quality improvement
processes by requiring the person leading risk management activities to have
training in risk management, investigations, root cause analysis, and data
analysis; requiring annual risk assessments, to include review of the
environment, staff competence, seclusion and restraint, serious incidents, and
risk triggers and thresholds; and requiring a quality improvement plan that is
reviewed and updated at least annually; (ii) improve reporting of serious
incidents and injuries to allow the Commonwealth to obtain more consistent data
regarding the prevalence of serious incidents by establishing three levels of
incidents and requiring providers to report on and conduct root cause analysis
of more serious incidents and to track and monitor less serious incidents; and
(iii) strengthen expectations for case management by adding assessment for
unidentified risks, status of previously identified risks, and assessing
whether the risk management plan is being implemented appropriately and remains
appropriate for the individual.
Since the Settlement Agreement was signed, the definition
of "developmental disability" was expanded to include
"intellectual disability" in the Code of Virginia (Chapter 458 of the
2017 Acts of Assembly), and changes have been made to Medicaid waivers in the
past year. Both of these developments impact the amendments in this action.
Article 2
Definitions
12VAC35-105-20. Definitions.
The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall
have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Abuse" (§ 37.2-100 of the Code of Virginia)
means any act or failure to act by an employee or other person responsible for
the care of an individual in a facility or program operated, licensed, or
funded by the department, excluding those operated by the Virginia Department
of Corrections, that was performed or was failed to be performed knowingly,
recklessly, or intentionally, and that caused or might have caused physical or
psychological harm, injury, or death to a person an individual
receiving care or treatment for mental illness, mental retardation
(intellectual disability) developmental disabilities, or substance
abuse (substance use disorders). Examples of abuse include acts such as:
1. Rape, sexual assault, or other criminal sexual behavior;
2. Assault or battery;
3. Use of language that demeans, threatens, intimidates, or
humiliates the person individual;
4. Misuse or misappropriation of the person's individual's
assets, goods, or property;
5. Use of excessive force when placing a person an
individual in physical or mechanical restraint;
6. Use of physical or mechanical restraints on a person
an individual that is not in compliance with federal and state laws,
regulations, and policies, professional accepted standards of practice, or the
person's his individualized services plan;
7. Use of more restrictive or intensive services or denial of
services to punish the person an individual or that is not
consistent with his individualized services plan.
"Activities of daily living" or "ADLs"
means personal care activities and includes bathing, dressing, transferring,
toileting, grooming, hygiene, feeding, and eating. An individual's degree of
independence in performing these activities is part of determining the
appropriate level of care and services.
"Admission" means the process of acceptance into a
service as defined by the provider's policies.
"Authorized representative" means a person
permitted by law or 12VAC35-115 to authorize the disclosure of information or
consent to treatment and services or participation in human research.
"Behavior intervention" means those principles and
methods employed by a provider to help an individual receiving services to
achieve a positive outcome and to address challenging behavior in a
constructive and safe manner. Behavior intervention principles and methods must
shall be employed in accordance with the individualized services plan
and written policies and procedures governing service expectations, treatment
goals, safety, and security.
"Behavioral treatment plan," "functional plan,"
or "behavioral support plan" means any set of documented procedures
that are an integral part of the individualized services plan and are developed
on the basis of a systematic data collection, such as a functional assessment,
for the purpose of assisting individuals to achieve the following:
1. Improved behavioral functioning and effectiveness;
2. Alleviation of symptoms of psychopathology; or
3. Reduction of challenging behaviors.
"Brain injury" means any injury to the brain that
occurs after birth, but before age 65, that is acquired through traumatic or
nontraumatic insults. Nontraumatic insults may include anoxia, hypoxia,
aneurysm, toxic exposure, encephalopathy, surgical interventions, tumor, and
stroke. Brain injury does not include hereditary, congenital, or degenerative
brain disorders or injuries induced by birth trauma.
"Care," or "treatment,"
or "support" means the individually planned therapeutic
interventions that conform to current acceptable professional practice and that
are intended to improve or maintain functioning of an individual receiving
services delivered by a provider.
"Case management service" or "support
coordination service" means services that can include assistance to
individuals and their family members in assessing accessing
needed services that are responsive to the person's individual individual's
needs. Case management services include: identifying potential users of the
service; assessing needs and planning services; linking the individual to
services and supports; assisting the individual directly to locate, develop, or
obtain needed services and resources; coordinating services with other
providers; enhancing community integration; making collateral contacts;
monitoring service delivery; discharge planning; and advocating for individuals
in response to their changing needs. "Case management service" does
not include assistance in which the only function is maintaining service
waiting lists or periodically contacting or tracking individuals to determine
potential service needs.
"Clinical experience" means providing direct
services to individuals with mental illness or the provision of direct
geriatric services or special education services. Experience may include
supervised internships, practicums, and field experience.
"Commissioner" means the Commissioner of the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services.
"Community gero-psychiatric residential services"
means 24-hour care provided to individuals with mental illness, behavioral
problems, and concomitant health problems who are usually age 65 or older in a
geriatric setting that is less intensive than a psychiatric hospital but more
intensive than a nursing home or group home. Services include assessment and
individualized services planning by an interdisciplinary services team, intense
supervision, psychiatric care, behavioral treatment planning and behavior
interventions, nursing, and other health related services.
"Community intermediate care facility/mental
retardation (ICF/MR)" means a residential facility in which care is
provided to individuals who have mental retardation (intellectual disability)
or a developmental disability who need more intensive training and supervision
than may be available in an assisted living facility or group home. Such
facilities shall comply with Title XIX of the Social Security Act standards and
federal certification requirements, provide health or rehabilitative services,
and provide active treatment to individuals receiving services toward the
achievement of a more independent level of functioning or an improved quality
of life.
"Complaint" means an allegation of a violation of these
regulations this chapter or a provider's policies and procedures
related to these regulations this chapter.
"Co-occurring disorders" means the presence of more
than one and often several of the following disorders that are identified
independently of one another and are not simply a cluster of symptoms resulting
from a single disorder: mental illness, mental retardation (intellectual disability)
a developmental disability, or substance abuse (substance use
disorders);, or brain injury; or developmental disability.
"Co-occurring services" means individually planned
therapeutic treatment that addresses in an integrated concurrent manner the
service needs of individuals who have co-occurring disorders.
"Corrective action plan" means the provider's
pledged corrective action in response to cited areas of noncompliance
documented by the regulatory authority. A corrective action plan must be completed
within a specified time.
"Correctional facility" means a facility operated
under the management and control of the Virginia Department of Corrections.
"Crisis" means a deteriorating or unstable
situation often developing suddenly or rapidly that produces acute, heightened,
emotional, mental, physical, medical, or behavioral distress; or any
situation or circumstance in which the individual perceives or experiences a
sudden loss of his ability to use effective problem-solving and coping skills.
"Crisis stabilization" means direct, intensive
nonresidential or residential direct care and treatment to nonhospitalized
individuals experiencing an acute crisis that may jeopardize their current
community living situation. Crisis stabilization is intended to avert
hospitalization or rehospitalization; provide normative environments with a
high assurance of safety and security for crisis intervention; stabilize
individuals in crisis; and mobilize the resources of the community support
system, family members, and others for ongoing rehabilitation and recovery.
"Day support service" means structured programs of activity
or training services training, assistance, and specialized supervision
in the acquisition, retention, or improvement of self-help, socialization, and
adaptive skills for adults with an intellectual disability or a
developmental disability, generally in clusters of two or more continuous
hours per day provided to groups or individuals in nonresidential
community-based settings. Day support services may provide opportunities for
peer interaction and community integration and are designed to enhance the
following: self-care and hygiene, eating, toileting, task learning, community
resource utilization, environmental and behavioral skills, social skills,
medication management, prevocational skills, and transportation skills. The
term "day support service" does not include services in which the primary
function is to provide employment-related services, general educational
services, or general recreational services.
"Department" means the Virginia Department of
Behavioral Health and Developmental Services.
"Developmental disabilities" means autism or a
severe, chronic disability that meets all of the following conditions
identified in 42 CFR 435.1009:
1. Attributable to cerebral palsy, epilepsy, or any other
condition, other than mental illness, that is found to be closely related to
mental retardation (intellectual disability) because this condition results in
impairment of general intellectual functioning or adaptive behavior similar to
behavior of individuals with mental retardation (intellectual disability) and
requires treatment or services similar to those required for these individuals;
2. Manifested before the individual reaches age 18;
3. Likely to continue indefinitely; and
4. Results in substantial functional limitations in three
or more of the following areas of major life activity:
a. Self-care;
b. Understanding and use of language;
c. Learning;
d. Mobility;
e. Self-direction; or
f. Capacity for independent living.
"Developmental disability" means a severe,
chronic disability of an individual that (i) is attributable to a mental or
physical impairment, or a combination of mental and physical impairments, other
than a sole diagnosis of mental illness; (ii) is manifested before the
individual reaches 22 years of age; (iii) is likely to continue indefinitely;
(iv) results in substantial functional limitations in three or more of the
following areas of major life activity: self-care, receptive and expressive
language, learning, mobility, self-direction, capacity for independent living,
or economic self-sufficiency; and (v) reflects the individual's need for a
combination and sequence of special interdisciplinary or generic services,
individualized supports, or other forms of assistance that are of lifelong or
extended duration and are individually planned and coordinated. An individual
from birth to age nine years, inclusive, who has a substantial developmental
delay or specific congenital or acquired condition may be considered to have a
developmental disability without meeting three or more of the criteria
described in clauses (i) through (v) of this definition if the individual,
without services and supports, has a high probability of meeting those criteria
later in life.
"Developmental services" means planned,
individualized, and person-centered services and supports provided to
individuals with developmental disabilities for the purpose of enabling these
individuals to increase their self-determination and independence, obtain
employment, participate fully in all aspects of community life, advocate for
themselves, and achieve their fullest potential to the greatest extent
possible.
"Direct care position" means any position that
includes responsibility for (i) treatment, case management, health, safety,
development, or well-being of an individual receiving services or (ii)
immediately supervising a person in a position with this responsibility.
"Discharge" means the process by which the
individual's active involvement with a service is terminated by the provider,
individual, or authorized representative.
"Discharge plan" means the written plan that
establishes the criteria for an individual's discharge from a service and
identifies and coordinates delivery of any services needed after discharge.
"Dispense" means to deliver a drug to an ultimate
user by or pursuant to the lawful order of a practitioner, including the
prescribing and administering, packaging, labeling or compounding necessary to
prepare the substance for that delivery. (§ 54.1-3400 et seq. of the Code of
Virginia.)
"Emergency service" means unscheduled and sometimes
scheduled crisis intervention, stabilization, and referral assistance provided
over the telephone or face-to-face, if indicated, available 24 hours a day and
seven days per week. Emergency services also may include walk-ins, home visits,
jail interventions, and preadmission screening activities associated with the
judicial process .
"Group home or community residential service" means
a congregate service providing 24-hour supervision in a community-based home
having eight or fewer residents. Services include supervision, supports,
counseling, and training in activities of daily living for individuals whose
individualized services plan identifies the need for the specific types of
services available in this setting.
"HCBS Waiver" means a Medicaid Home and
Community Based Services Waiver.
"Home and noncenter based" means that a service is
provided in the individual's home or other noncenter-based setting. This
includes noncenter-based day support, supportive in-home, and intensive in-home
services.
"IFDDS Waiver" means the Individual and Family
Developmental Disabilities Support Waiver.
"Individual" or "individual receiving
services" means a person receiving services that are licensed under
this chapter whether that person is referred to as a patient, current
direct recipient of public or private mental health, developmental, or
substance abuse treatment, rehabilitation, or habilitation services and
includes the terms "consumer," client "patient,"
"resident," student, individual, "recipient,"
family member, relative, or other term "client."
When the term is used in this chapter, the requirement applies to every
individual receiving licensed services from the provider.
"Individualized services plan" or "ISP"
means a comprehensive and regularly updated written plan that describes the
individual's needs, the measurable goals and objectives to address those needs,
and strategies to reach the individual's goals. An ISP is person-centered,
empowers the individual, and is designed to meet the needs and preferences of
the individual. The ISP is developed through a partnership between the
individual and the provider and includes an individual's treatment plan,
habilitation plan, person-centered plan, or plan of care, which are all
considered individualized service plans.
"Informed choice" means a decision made after
considering options based on adequate and accurate information and knowledge.
These options are developed through collaboration with the individual and his
authorized representative, as applicable, and the provider with the intent of
empowering the individual and his authorized representative to make decisions
that will lead to positive service outcomes.
"Informed consent" means the voluntary written
agreement of an individual, or that individual's authorized representative, to
surgery, electroconvulsive treatment, use of psychotropic medications, or any
other treatment or service that poses a risk of harm greater than that
ordinarily encountered in daily life or for participation in human research. To
be voluntary, informed consent must be given freely and without undue
inducement; any element of force, fraud, deceit, or duress; or any form of
constraint or coercion.
"Initial assessment" means an assessment conducted
prior to or at admission to determine whether the individual meets the
service's admission criteria; what the individual's immediate service, health,
and safety needs are; and whether the provider has the capability and staffing
to provide the needed services.
"Inpatient psychiatric service" means intensive
24-hour medical, nursing, and treatment services provided to individuals with
mental illness or substance abuse (substance use disorders) in a hospital as
defined in § 32.1-123 of the Code of Virginia or in a special unit of such a
hospital.
"Instrumental activities of daily living" or
"IADLs" means meal preparation, housekeeping, laundry, and managing
money. A person's An individual's degree of independence in
performing these activities is part of determining the appropriate level
of care and services.
"Intellectual disability" means a disability,
originating before the age of 18 years, characterized concurrently by (i)
significant subaverage intellectual functioning as demonstrated by performance
on a standardized measure of intellectual functioning, administered in
conformity with accepted professional practice, that is at least two standard
deviations below the mean and (ii) significant limitations in adaptive behavior
as expressed in conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills.
"Intensive Community Treatment (ICT) community
treatment service" or "ICT service" means a
self-contained interdisciplinary team of at least five full-time equivalent
clinical staff, a program assistant, and a full-time psychiatrist that:
1. Assumes responsibility for directly providing needed
treatment, rehabilitation, and support services to identified individuals with
severe and persistent mental illness especially those who have severe symptoms
that are not effectively remedied by available treatments or who because of
reasons related to their mental illness resist or avoid involvement with mental
health services;
2. Minimally refers individuals to outside service providers;
3. Provides services on a long-term care basis with continuity
of caregivers over time;
4. Delivers 75% or more of the services outside program
offices; and
5. Emphasizes outreach, relationship building, and
individualization of services.
"Intensive in-home service" means family
preservation interventions for children and adolescents who have or are at-risk
of serious emotional disturbance, including individuals who also have a
diagnosis of mental retardation (intellectual disability) developmental
disability. Intensive in-home service is usually time-limited and is
provided typically in the residence of an individual who is at risk of being
moved to out-of-home placement or who is being transitioned back home from an
out-of-home placement. The service includes 24-hour per day emergency response;
crisis treatment; individual and family counseling; life, parenting, and
communication skills; and case management and coordination with other services.
"Intermediate care facility/individuals with
intellectual disability" or "ICF/IID" means a facility or
distinct part of a facility certified by the Virginia Department of Health as
meeting the federal certification regulations for an intermediate care facility
for individuals with intellectual disability and persons with related
conditions and that addresses the total needs of the residents, which include
physical, intellectual, social, emotional, and habilitation providing active
treatment as defined in 42 CFR 435.1010 and 42 CFR 483.440.
"Investigation" means a detailed inquiry or
systematic examination of the operations of a provider or its services
regarding an alleged violation of regulations or law. An investigation may be
undertaken as a result of a complaint, an incident report, or other information
that comes to the attention of the department.
"Licensed mental health professional (LMHP)"
or "LMHP" means a physician, licensed clinical psychologist,
licensed professional counselor, licensed clinical social worker, licensed
substance abuse treatment practitioner, licensed marriage and family therapist,
or certified psychiatric clinical nurse specialist.
"Location" means a place where services are or
could be provided.
"Medically managed withdrawal services" means
detoxification services to eliminate or reduce the effects of alcohol or other
drugs in the individual's body.
"Mandatory outpatient treatment order" means an
order issued by a court pursuant to § 37.2-817 of the Code of Virginia.
"Medical detoxification" means a service provided
in a hospital or other 24-hour care facility under the supervision of medical
personnel using medication to systematically eliminate or reduce effects of
alcohol or other drugs in the individual's body.
"Medical evaluation" means the process of assessing
an individual's health status that includes a medical history and a physical
examination of an individual conducted by a licensed medical practitioner
operating within the scope of his license.
"Medication" means prescribed or over-the-counter
drugs or both.
"Medication administration" means the direct
application of medications by injection, inhalation, ingestion, or any other
means to an individual receiving services by (i) persons legally permitted to
administer medications or (ii) the individual at the direction and in the
presence of persons legally permitted to administer medications.
"Medication assisted treatment (Opioid treatment
service)" means an intervention strategy that combines outpatient
treatment with the administering or dispensing of synthetic narcotics, such as
methadone or buprenorphine (suboxone), approved by the federal Food and Drug
Administration for the purpose of replacing the use of and reducing the craving
for opioid substances, such as heroin or other narcotic drugs.
"Medication error" means an error in administering
a medication to an individual and includes when any of the following occur: (i)
the wrong medication is given to an individual, (ii) the wrong individual is
given the medication, (iii) the wrong dosage is given to an individual, (iv)
medication is given to an individual at the wrong time or not at all, or (v)
the wrong method is used to give the medication to the individual.
"Medication storage" means any area where
medications are maintained by the provider, including a locked cabinet, locked
room, or locked box.
"Mental Health Community Support Service (MHCSS)"
or "MHCSS" means the provision of recovery-oriented services
to individuals with long-term, severe mental illness. MHCSS includes skills
training and assistance in accessing and effectively utilizing services and
supports that are essential to meeting the needs identified in the
individualized services plan and development of environmental supports
necessary to sustain active community living as independently as possible.
MHCSS may be provided in any setting in which the individual's needs can be
addressed, skills training applied, and recovery experienced.
"Mental illness" means a disorder of thought, mood,
emotion, perception, or orientation that significantly impairs judgment,
behavior, capacity to recognize reality, or ability to address basic life
necessities and requires care and treatment for the health, safety, or recovery
of the individual or for the safety of others.
"Mental retardation (intellectual disability)"
means a disability originating before the age of 18 years characterized
concurrently by (i) significantly subaverage intellectual functioning as
demonstrated by performance on a standardized measure of intellectual
functioning administered in conformity with accepted professional practice that
is at least two standard deviations below the mean; and (ii) significant
limitations in adaptive behavior as expressed in conceptual, social, and
practical adaptive skills (§ 37.2-100 of the Code of Virginia).
"Missing" means a circumstance in which an
individual is not physically present when and where he should be and his
absence cannot be accounted for or explained by his supervision needs or
pattern of behavior.
"Neglect" means the failure by an
individual a person, or a program or facility operated, licensed, or
funded by the department, excluding those operated by the Department of
Corrections, responsible for providing services to do so, including
nourishment, treatment, care, goods, or services necessary to the health,
safety, or welfare of a person an individual receiving care or
treatment for mental illness, mental retardation (intellectual disability)
developmental disabilities, or substance abuse (substance use
disorders).
"Neurobehavioral services" means the assessment,
evaluation, and treatment of cognitive, perceptual, behavioral, and other
impairments caused by brain injury that affect an individual's ability to
function successfully in the community.
"Outpatient service" means treatment provided to
individuals on an hourly schedule, on an individual, group, or family basis,
and usually in a clinic or similar facility or in another location. Outpatient
services may include diagnosis and evaluation, screening and intake,
counseling, psychotherapy, behavior management, psychological testing and
assessment, laboratory and other ancillary services, medical services, and
medication services. "Outpatient service" specifically includes:
1. Services operated by a community services board or a
behavioral health authority established pursuant to Chapter 5 (§ 37.2-500 et
seq.) or Chapter 6 (§ 37.2-600 et seq.) of Title 37.2 of the Code of Virginia;
2. Services contracted by a community services board or a
behavioral health authority established pursuant to Chapter 5 (§ 37.2-500 et
seq.) or Chapter 6 (§ 37.2-600 et seq.) of Title 37.2 of the Code of Virginia;
or
3. Services that are owned, operated, or controlled by a
corporation organized pursuant to the provisions of either Chapter 9 (§
13.1-601 et seq.) or Chapter 10 (§ 13.1-801 et seq.) of Title 13.1 of the Code
of Virginia.
"Partial hospitalization service" means
time-limited active treatment interventions that are more intensive than
outpatient services, designed to stabilize and ameliorate acute symptoms, and serve
as an alternative to inpatient hospitalization or to reduce the length of a
hospital stay. Partial hospitalization is focused on individuals with serious
mental illness, substance abuse (substance use disorders), or co-occurring
disorders at risk of hospitalization or who have been recently discharged from
an inpatient setting.
"Person-centered" means focusing on the needs and
preferences of the individual; empowering and supporting the individual in
defining the direction for his life; and promoting self-determination,
community involvement, and recovery.
"Program of Assertive Community Treatment (PACT)
service" means a self-contained interdisciplinary team of at least 10
full-time equivalent clinical staff, a program assistant, and a full-time
or part-time psychiatrist that:
1. Assumes responsibility for directly providing needed
treatment, rehabilitation, and support services to identified individuals with
severe and persistent mental illnesses, including those who have severe
symptoms that are not effectively remedied by available treatments or who
because of reasons related to their mental illness resist or avoid involvement
with mental health services;
2. Minimally refers individuals to outside service providers;
3. Provides services on a long-term care basis with continuity
of caregivers over time;
4. Delivers 75% or more of the services outside program
offices; and
5. Emphasizes outreach, relationship building, and
individualization of services.
"Provider" means any person, entity, or organization,
excluding an agency of the federal government by whatever name or designation,
that delivers (i) services to individuals with mental illness, mental
retardation (intellectual disability) developmental disabilities, or
substance abuse (substance use disorders), or (ii) services to
individuals who receive day support, in-home support, or crisis stabilization
services funded through the IFDDS Waiver, or (iii) residential services for
individuals with brain injury. The person, entity, or organization shall
include a hospital as defined in § 32.1-123 of the Code of Virginia,
community services board, behavioral health authority, private provider, and
any other similar or related person, entity, or organization. It shall not
include any individual practitioner who holds a license issued by a health
regulatory board of the Department of Health Professions or who is exempt from
licensing pursuant to §§ 54.1-2901, 54.1-3001, 54.1-3501, 54.1-3601 and
54.1-3701 of the Code of Virginia.
"Psychosocial rehabilitation service" means a
program of two or more consecutive hours per day provided to groups of adults
in a nonresidential setting. Individuals must demonstrate a clinical need for
the service arising from a condition due to mental, behavioral, or emotional
illness that results in significant functional impairments in major life
activities. This service provides education to teach the individual about
mental illness, substance abuse, and appropriate medication to avoid
complication and relapse and opportunities to learn and use independent skills
and to enhance social and interpersonal skills within a consistent program
structure and environment. Psychosocial rehabilitation includes skills
training, peer support, vocational rehabilitation, and community resource development
oriented toward empowerment, recovery, and competency.
"Qualified developmental disability professional
(QDDP)" or "QDDP" means a person who possesses at least one
year of documented experience working directly with individuals who have a developmental
disability and one of the following credentials: (i) a doctor of medicine or
osteopathy licensed in Virginia, (ii) a registered nurse licensed in Virginia,
or (iii) completion of at least a bachelor's degree in a human services field,
including sociology, social work, special education, rehabilitation counseling,
or psychology.
"Quality improvement plan" means a detailed work
plan developed by a provider that defines steps the provider will take to
review the quality of services it provides and to manage initiatives to improve
quality. It consists of systematic and continuous actions that lead to
measurable improvement in the services, supports, and health status of the
individuals receiving services.
"Qualified Mental Health Professional-Adult (QMHP-A)"
or "QMHP-A" means a person in the human services field who is
trained and experienced in providing psychiatric or mental health services to individuals
adults who have a mental illness; including (i) a doctor of medicine or
osteopathy licensed in Virginia; (ii) a doctor of medicine or osteopathy,
specializing in psychiatry and licensed in Virginia; (iii) an individual with a
master's degree in psychology from an accredited college or university with at
least one year of clinical experience; (iv) a social worker: an individual with
at least a bachelor's degree in human services or related field (social work,
psychology, psychiatric rehabilitation, sociology, counseling, vocational
rehabilitation, human services counseling, or other degree deemed equivalent
to those described) from an accredited college and with at least one year of
clinical experience providing direct services to individuals with a diagnosis
of mental illness; (v) a person with at least a bachelor's degree from an
accredited college in an unrelated field that includes at least 15 semester
credits (or equivalent) in a human services field and who has at least three
years of clinical experience; (vi) a Certified Psychiatric Rehabilitation
Provider (CPRP) registered with the United States Psychiatric Rehabilitation
Association (USPRA); (vii) a registered nurse licensed in Virginia with at
least one year of clinical experience; or (viii) any other licensed mental
health professional.
"Qualified Mental Health Professional-Child (QMHP-C)"
or "QMHP-C" means a person in the human services field who is
trained and experienced in providing psychiatric or mental health services to
children who have a mental illness. To qualify as a QMHP-C, the individual must
have the designated clinical experience and must either (i) be a doctor of
medicine or osteopathy licensed in Virginia; (ii) have a master's degree in
psychology from an accredited college or university with at least one year of
clinical experience with children and adolescents; (iii) have a social work
bachelor's or master's degree from an accredited college or university with at
least one year of documented clinical experience with children or adolescents;
(iv) be a registered nurse with at least one year of clinical experience with
children and adolescents; (v) have at least a bachelor's degree in a human
services field or in special education from an accredited college with at least
one year of clinical experience with providing direct services to
children and adolescents with a diagnosis of mental illness, or (vi) be
a licensed mental health professional.
"Qualified Mental Health Professional-Eligible
(QMHP-E)" or "QMHP-E" means a person who has: (i) at
least a bachelor's degree in a human service field or special education from an
accredited college without one year of clinical experience or (ii) at least a
bachelor's degree in a nonrelated field and is enrolled in a master's or
doctoral clinical program, taking the equivalent of at least three credit hours
per semester and is employed by a provider that has a triennial license issued
by the department and has a department and DMAS-approved supervision training
program.
"Qualified Mental Retardation Professional
(QMRP)" means a person who possesses at least one year of documented
experience working directly with individuals who have mental retardation
(intellectual disability) or other developmental disabilities and one of the
following credentials: (i) a doctor of medicine or osteopathy licensed in
Virginia, (ii) a registered nurse licensed in Virginia, or (iii) completion of
at least a bachelor's degree in a human services field, including, but not
limited to sociology, social work, special education, rehabilitation
counseling, or psychology.
"Qualified Paraprofessional in Mental Health (QPPMH)"
or "QPPMH" means a person who must, at a minimum, meet one of
the following criteria: (i) registered with the United States Psychiatric
Association (USPRA) as an Associate Psychiatric Rehabilitation Provider (APRP);
(ii) has an associate's degree in a related field (social work, psychology,
psychiatric rehabilitation, sociology, counseling, vocational rehabilitation,
human services counseling) and at least one year of experience providing direct
services to individuals with a diagnosis of mental illness; or (iii) has a
minimum of 90 hours classroom training and 12 weeks of experience under the
direct personal supervision of a QMHP-Adult providing services to individuals
with mental illness and at least one year of experience (including the 12 weeks
of supervised experience).
"Recovery" means a journey of healing and
transformation enabling an individual with a mental illness to live a
meaningful life in a community of his choice while striving to achieve his full
potential. For individuals with substance abuse (substance use disorders),
recovery is an incremental process leading to positive social change and a full
return to biological, psychological, and social functioning. For individuals
with mental retardation (intellectual disability) a developmental disability,
the concept of recovery does not apply in the sense that individuals with mental
retardation (intellectual disability) a developmental disability
will need supports throughout their entire lives although these may change over
time. With supports, individuals with mental retardation (intellectual
disability) a developmental disability are capable of living lives
that are fulfilling and satisfying and that bring meaning to themselves and
others whom they know.
"Referral" means the process of directing an
applicant or an individual to a provider or service that is designed to provide
the assistance needed.
"Residential crisis stabilization service" means
(i) providing short-term, intensive treatment to nonhospitalized individuals
who require multidisciplinary treatment in order to stabilize acute psychiatric
symptoms and prevent admission to a psychiatric inpatient unit; (ii) providing
normative environments with a high assurance of safety and security for crisis
intervention; and (iii) mobilizing the resources of the community support
system, family members, and others for ongoing rehabilitation and recovery.
"Residential service" means providing 24-hour
support in conjunction with care and treatment or a training program in a
setting other than a hospital or training center. Residential services provide
a range of living arrangements from highly structured and intensively
supervised to relatively independent requiring a modest amount of staff support
and monitoring. Residential services include residential treatment, group or
community homes, supervised living, residential crisis stabilization,
community gero-psychiatric residential, community intermediate care
facility-MR ICF/IID, sponsored residential homes, medical and social
detoxification, neurobehavioral services, and substance abuse residential
treatment for women and children.
"Residential treatment service" means providing an
intensive and highly structured mental health, substance abuse, or
neurobehavioral service, or services for co-occurring disorders in a
residential setting, other than an inpatient service.
"Respite care service" means providing for a
short-term, time limited period of care of an individual for the purpose of
providing relief to the individual's family, guardian, or regular care giver.
Persons providing respite care are recruited, trained, and supervised by a
licensed provider. These services may be provided in a variety of settings
including residential, day support, in-home, or a sponsored residential home.
"Restraint" means the use of a mechanical device,
medication, physical intervention, or hands-on hold to prevent an individual
receiving services from moving his body to engage in a behavior that places him
or others at imminent risk. There are three kinds of restraints:
1. Mechanical restraint means the use of a mechanical device
that cannot be removed by the individual to restrict the individual's freedom
of movement or functioning of a limb or portion of an individual's body when
that behavior places him or others at imminent risk.
2. Pharmacological restraint means the use of a medication
that is administered involuntarily for the emergency control of an individual's
behavior when that individual's behavior places him or others at imminent risk
and the administered medication is not a standard treatment for the
individual's medical or psychiatric condition.
3. Physical restraint, also referred to as manual hold, means
the use of a physical intervention or hands-on hold to prevent an individual
from moving his body when that individual's behavior places him or others at
imminent risk.
"Restraints for behavioral purposes" means using a
physical hold, medication, or a mechanical device to control behavior or
involuntary restrict the freedom of movement of an individual in an instance
when all of the following conditions are met: (i) there is an emergency; (ii)
nonphysical interventions are not viable; and (iii) safety issues require an
immediate response.
"Restraints for medical purposes" means using a
physical hold, medication, or mechanical device to limit the mobility of an
individual for medical, diagnostic, or surgical purposes, such as routine
dental care or radiological procedures and related post-procedure care
processes, when use of the restraint is not the accepted clinical practice for
treating the individual's condition.
"Restraints for protective purposes" means using a
mechanical device to compensate for a physical or cognitive deficit when the
individual does not have the option to remove the device. The device may limit
an individual's movement, for example, bed rails or a gerichair, and prevent
possible harm to the individual or it may create a passive barrier, such as a
helmet to protect the individual.
"Restriction" means anything that limits or prevents
an individual from freely exercising his rights and privileges.
"Risk management" means an integrated
system-wide program to ensure the safety of individuals, employees, visitors,
and others through identification, mitigation, early detection, monitoring,
evaluation, and control of risks.
"Root cause analysis" means a method of problem
solving designed to identify the underlying causes of a problem. The focus of a
root cause analysis is on systems, processes, and outcomes that require change
to reduce the risk of harm.
"Screening" means the process or procedure for
determining whether the individual meets the minimum criteria for admission.
"Seclusion" means the involuntary placement of an
individual alone in an area secured by a door that is locked or held shut by a
staff person, by physically blocking the door, or by any other physical means
so that the individual cannot leave it.
"Serious incident" means any event or
circumstance that causes or could cause harm to the health, safety, or
well-being of an individual. The term "serious incident" includes
death and serious injury. "Level I serious incident" means a serious
incident that occurs or originates during the provision of a service or on the
premises of the provider and does not meet the definition of a Level II or
Level III serious incident. "Level I serious incidents" do not result
in significant harm to individuals, but may include events that result in minor
injuries that do not require medical attention or events that have the potential
to cause serious injury, even when no injury occurs. "Level II serious
incident" means a serious incident that occurs or originates during the
provision of a service or on the premises of the provider that results in a
significant harm or threat to the health and safety of an individual that does
not meet the definition of a Level III serious incident. "Level II serious
incident" includes a significant harm or threat to the health or safety of
others caused by an individual. "Level II serious incidents" include:
1. A serious injury;
2. An individual who is missing;
3. An emergency room or urgent care facility visit when not
used in lieu of a primary care physician visit;
4. An unplanned psychiatric or unplanned medical hospital
admission;
5. Choking incidents that require direct physical
intervention by another person;
6. Ingestion of any hazardous material; or
7. A diagnosis of:
a. A decubitus ulcer or an increase in severity of level of
previously diagnosed decubitus ulcer;
b. A bowel obstruction; or
c. Aspiration pneumonia.
"Level III serious incident" means a serious
incident whether or not the incident occurs while in the provision of a service
or on the provider's premises and results in:
1. Any death of an individual;
2. A sexual assault of an individual;
3. A serious injury of an individual that results in or
likely will result in permanent physical or psychological impairment; or
4. A suicide attempt by an individual admitted for services
that results in a hospital admission.
"Serious injury" means any injury resulting in
bodily hurt, damage, harm, or loss that requires medical attention by a
licensed physician, doctor of osteopathic medicine, physician assistant, or
nurse practitioner while the individual is supervised by or involved in
services, such as attempted suicides, medication overdoses, or reactions from
medications administered or prescribed by the service.
"Service" or "services" means (i)
planned individualized interventions intended to reduce or ameliorate mental illness,
mental retardation (intellectual disability) developmental
disabilities, or substance abuse (substance use disorders) through care,
treatment, training, habilitation, or other supports that are delivered by a
provider to individuals with mental illness, mental retardation
(intellectual disability) developmental disabilities, or substance
abuse (substance use disorders). Services include outpatient services,
intensive in-home services, opioid treatment services, inpatient psychiatric
hospitalization, community gero-psychiatric residential services, assertive
community treatment and other clinical services; day support, day treatment,
partial hospitalization, psychosocial rehabilitation, and habilitation
services; case management services; and supportive residential, special
school, halfway house, in-home services, crisis stabilization, and
other residential services; and (ii) day support, in-home support,
and crisis stabilization services provided to individuals under the IFDDS Medicaid
Waiver; and (iii) planned individualized interventions intended to reduce
or ameliorate the effects of brain injury through care, treatment, or other
supports or provided in residential services for persons with
brain injury.
"Shall" means an obligation to act is imposed.
"Shall not" means an obligation not to act is
imposed.
"Skills training" means systematic skill building
through curriculum-based psychoeducational and cognitive-behavioral
interventions. These interventions break down complex objectives for role performance
into simpler components, including basic cognitive skills such as attention, to
facilitate learning and competency.
"Social detoxification service" means providing
nonmedical supervised care for the individual's natural process of withdrawal
from use of alcohol or other drugs.
"Sponsored residential home" means a service where
providers arrange for, supervise, and provide programmatic, financial, and
service support to families or persons (sponsors) providing care or treatment
in their own homes for individuals receiving services.
"State board" means the State Board of Behavioral
Health and Developmental Services. The board has statutory responsibility for
adopting regulations that may be necessary to carry out the provisions of Title
37.2 of the Code of Virginia and other laws of the Commonwealth administered by
the commissioner or the department.
"State methadone authority" means the Virginia
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services that is authorized
by the federal Center for Substance Abuse Treatment to exercise the
responsibility and authority for governing the treatment of opiate addiction
with an opioid drug.
"Substance abuse (substance use disorders)" means
the use of drugs enumerated in the Virginia Drug Control Act (§ 54.1-3400
et seq.) without a compelling medical reason or alcohol that (i) results in
psychological or physiological dependence or danger to self or others as a
function of continued and compulsive use or (ii) results in mental, emotional,
or physical impairment that causes socially dysfunctional or socially
disordering behavior; and (iii), because of such substance abuse, requires care
and treatment for the health of the individual. This care and treatment may
include counseling, rehabilitation, or medical or psychiatric care.
"Substance abuse intensive outpatient service"
means treatment provided in a concentrated manner for two or more consecutive
hours per day to groups of individuals in a nonresidential setting. This
service is provided over a period of time for individuals requiring more
intensive services than an outpatient service can provide. Substance abuse
intensive outpatient services include multiple group therapy sessions during
the week, individual and family therapy, individual monitoring, and case
management.
"Substance abuse residential treatment for women with
children service" means a 24-hour residential service providing an
intensive and highly structured substance abuse service for women with children
who live in the same facility.
"Supervised living residential service" means the
provision of significant direct supervision and community support services to
individuals living in apartments or other residential settings. These services
differ from supportive in-home service because the provider assumes
responsibility for management of the physical environment of the residence, and
staff supervision and monitoring are daily and available on a 24-hour basis.
Services are provided based on the needs of the individual in areas such as
food preparation, housekeeping, medication administration, personal hygiene,
treatment, counseling, and budgeting.
"Supportive in-home service" (formerly supportive
residential) means the provision of community support services and other
structured services to assist individuals, to strengthen individual skills, and
that provide environmental supports necessary to attain and sustain independent
community residential living. Services include drop-in or friendly-visitor
support and counseling to more intensive support, monitoring, training, in-home
support, respite care, and family support services. Services are based on the
needs of the individual and include training and assistance. These services
normally do not involve overnight care by the provider; however, due to the
flexible nature of these services, overnight care may be provided on an
occasional basis.
"Systemic deficiency" means violations of
regulations documented by the department that demonstrate multiple or repeat
defects in the operation of one or more services.
"Therapeutic day treatment for children and
adolescents" means a treatment program that serves (i) children and
adolescents from birth through age 17 and under certain circumstances up to 21
with serious emotional disturbances, substance use, or co-occurring disorders
or (ii) children from birth through age seven who are at risk of serious
emotional disturbance, in order to combine psychotherapeutic interventions with
education and mental health or substance abuse treatment. Services include: evaluation;
medication education and management; opportunities to learn and use daily
living skills and to enhance social and interpersonal skills; and individual,
group, and family counseling.
"Time out" means the involuntary removal of an
individual by a staff person from a source of reinforcement to a different,
open location for a specified period of time or until the problem behavior has
subsided to discontinue or reduce the frequency of problematic behavior.
"Volunteer" means a person who, without financial
remuneration, provides services to individuals on behalf of the provider.
Part II
Licensing Process
12VAC35-105-30. Licenses.
A. Licenses are issued to providers who offer services to
individuals who have mental illness, mental retardation (intellectual
disability) a developmental disability, or substance abuse
(substance use disorders); have developmental disability and are served
under the IFDDS Waiver; or have brain injury and are receiving residential
services.
B. Providers shall be licensed to provide specific services
as defined in this chapter or as determined by the commissioner. These services
include:
1. Case management;
2. Community gero-psychiatric residential;
3. Community intermediate care facility-MR ICF/IID;
4. Residential crisis stabilization;
5. Nonresidential crisis stabilization;
6. Day support;
7. Day treatment, includes therapeutic day treatment for
children and adolescents;
8. Group home and community residential;
9. Inpatient psychiatric;
10. Intensive Community Treatment (ICT);
11. Intensive in-home;
12. Managed withdrawal, including medical detoxification and
social detoxification;
13. Mental health community support;
14. Opioid treatment/medication assisted treatment;
15. Emergency;
16. Outpatient;
17. Partial hospitalization;
18. Program of assertive community treatment (PACT);
19. Psychosocial rehabilitation;
20. Residential treatment;
21. Respite care;
22. Sponsored residential home;
23. Substance abuse residential treatment for women with
children;
24. Substance abuse intensive outpatient;
25. Supervised living residential; and
26. Supportive in-home.
C. A license addendum shall describe the services licensed,
the disabilities of individuals who may be served, the specific locations where
services are to be provided or administered, and the terms and conditions for
each service offered by a licensed provider. For residential and inpatient
services, the license identifies the number of individuals each residential
location may serve at a given time.
12VAC35-105-50. Issuance of licenses.
A. The commissioner may issue the following types of
licenses:
1. A conditional license shall may be issued to
a new provider for services that demonstrates compliance with administrative and
policy regulations but has not demonstrated compliance with all the
regulations.
a. A conditional license shall not exceed six months.
b. A conditional license may be renewed if the provider is not
able to demonstrate compliance with all the regulations at the end of the
license period. A conditional license and any renewals shall not exceed 12
successive months for all conditional licenses and renewals combined.
c. A provider holding a conditional license for a service
shall demonstrate progress toward compliance.
d. A provider holding a conditional license shall not add
services or locations during the conditional period.
e. A group home or community residential service provider
shall be limited to providing services in a single location, serving no more
than four individuals during the conditional period.
2. A provisional license may be issued to a provider for a
service that has demonstrated an inability to maintain compliance with regulations
Human Rights Regulations (12VAC35-115) or this chapter, has violations
of human rights or licensing regulations that pose a threat to the health or
safety of individuals being served receiving services, has
multiple violations of human rights or licensing regulations, or has failed to
comply with a previous corrective action plan.
a. A provisional license may be issued at any time.
b. The term of a provisional license shall not exceed six
months.
c. A provisional license may be renewed; but a provisional
license and any renewals shall not exceed 12 successive months for all
provisional licenses and renewals combined.
d. A provider holding a provisional license for a service
shall demonstrate progress toward compliance.
e. A provider holding a provisional license for a service
shall not increase its services or locations or expand the capacity of the
service.
f. A provisional license for a service shall be noted as a
stipulation on the provider license. The stipulation shall also indicate the
violations to be corrected and the expiration date of the provisional license.
3. A full license shall be issued after a provider or service
demonstrates compliance with all the applicable regulations.
a. A full license may be granted to a provider for service for
up to three years. The length of the license shall be in the sole discretion of
the commissioner.
b. If a full license is granted for three years, it shall be
referred to as a triennial license. A triennial license shall be granted to
providers for services that have demonstrated full compliance with the
all applicable regulations. The commissioner may issue a triennial
license to a provider for service that had violations during the previous license
period if those violations did not pose a threat to the health or safety of
individuals being served receiving services, and the provider or
service has demonstrated consistent compliance for more than a year and has a
process in place that provides sufficient oversight to maintain compliance.
c. If a full license is granted for one year, it shall be
referred to as an annual license.
d. The term of the first full renewal license after the
expiration of a conditional or provisional license shall not exceed one year.
B. The commissioner may add stipulations on a license issued
to a provider that may place limits on the provider or to impose additional
requirements on the provider.
C. A license shall not be transferred or assigned to another
provider. A new application shall be made and a new license issued when there
is a change in ownership.
D. A license shall not be issued or renewed unless the
provider is affiliated with a local human rights committee.
E. D. No service shall be issued a license with
an expiration date that is after the expiration date of the provider license.
F. E. A license shall continue in effect after
the expiration date if the provider has submitted a renewal application before
the date of expiration and there are no grounds to deny the application. The
department shall issue a letter stating the provider or service license shall
be effective for six additional months if the renewed license is not issued
before the date of expiration.
12VAC35-105-120. Variances.
The commissioner may grant a variance to a specific
regulation if he determines that such a variance will not jeopardize the
health, safety, or welfare of individuals and upon demonstration by
the provider requesting. A provider shall submit a request for such
variance in writing to the commissioner. The request shall demonstrate
that complying with the regulation would be a hardship unique to the provider and
that the variance will not jeopardize the health, safety, or welfare of
individuals. The department may limit the length of time a variance will be
effective. A provider shall submit a request for a variance in writing
to the commissioner. A variance may be time limited or have other conditions
attached to it. The department must approve a variance prior to implementation.
The provider shall not implement a variance until it has been approved in
writing by the commissioner.
12VAC35-105-150. Compliance with applicable laws, regulations
and policies.
The provider including its employees, contractors, students,
and volunteers shall comply with:
1. These regulations This chapter;
2. The terms and stipulations of the license;
3. All applicable federal, state, or local laws and
regulations including:
a. Laws regarding employment practices including the Equal
Employment Opportunity Act;
b. The Americans with Disabilities Act and the Virginians with
Disabilities Act;
c. For home and community-based services waiver settings
subject to this chapter, 42 CFR 441.301(c)(1) through (4), Contents of request
for a waiver;
c. d. Occupational Safety and Health
Administration regulations;
d. e. Virginia Department of Health regulations;
e. Laws and regulations of the f. Virginia
Department of Health Professions regulations;
f. g. Virginia Department of Medical Assistance
Services regulations;
g. h. Uniform Statewide Building Code; and
h. i. Uniform Statewide Fire Prevention Code.
4. Section 37.2-400 of the Code of Virginia and related human
rights regulations adopted by the state board; and
5.The provider's own policies. All required policies shall be
in writing.
12VAC35-105-155. Preadmission screening, discharge planning,
involuntary commitment, and mandatory outpatient treatment orders.
A. Providers responsible for complying with §§ 37.2-505
and 37.2-606 of the Code of Virginia regarding community service services
board and behavioral health authority preadmission screening and discharge
planning shall implement policies and procedures that include:
1. Identification, qualification, training, and
responsibilities of employees responsible for preadmission screening and
discharge planning.
2. Completion of a discharge plan prior to an individual's
discharge in consultation with the state facility that:
a. Involves the individual or his authorized representative
and reflects the individual's preferences to the greatest extent possible
consistent with the individual's needs.
b. Involves mental health, mental retardation (intellectual
disability) developmental disability, substance abuse, social,
educational, medical, employment, housing, legal, advocacy, transportation, and
other services that the individual will need upon discharge into the community
and identifies the public or private agencies or persons that have agreed to
provide them.
B. Any provider who serves individuals through an emergency
custody order, temporary detention order, or mandatory outpatient treatment
order shall implement policies and procedures to comply with §§ 37.2-800
through 37.2-817 of the Code of Virginia.
12VAC35-105-160. Reviews by the department; requests for
information; required reporting.
A. The provider shall permit representatives from the
department to conduct reviews to:
1. Verify application information;
2. Assure compliance with this chapter; and
3. Investigate complaints.
B. The provider shall cooperate fully with inspections and
investigations and shall provide all information requested to
assist representatives from by the department who conduct
inspections.
C. The provider shall collect, maintain, and review at
least quarterly all Level I serious incidents as part of the quality
improvement program in accordance with 12VAC35-105-620 to include an analysis
of trends, potential systemic issues or causes, indicated remediation, and
documentation of steps taken to mitigate the potential for future incidents.
D. The provider shall collect, maintain, and report or
make available to the department the following information:
1. Each allegation of abuse or neglect shall be reported to
the assigned human rights advocate and the individual's authorized
representative within 24 hours from the receipt of the initial allegation.
Reported information shall include the type of abuse, neglect, or exploitation
that is alleged and whether there is physical or psychological injury to the
individual department as provided in 12VAC35-115-230 A.
2. Each instance of death or serious injury in writing to
the department's assigned licensing specialist Level II and Level III
serious incidents shall be reported using the department's
web-based reporting application and by telephone to anyone designated by the
individual to receive such notice and to the individual's authorized
representative within 24 hours of discovery and by phone to the
individual's authorized representative within 24 hours. Reported
information shall include the information specified by the department as
required in its web-based reporting application, but at least the following:
the date and, place, and circumstances of the individual's
death or serious injury; serious incident. For serious injuries and
deaths, the reported information shall also include the nature of the
individual's injuries or circumstances of the death and the any
treatment received; and the circumstances of the death or serious injury.
For all other Level II and Level III serious incidents, the reported
information shall also include the consequences or risk of harm that resulted
from the serious incident. Deaths that occur in a hospital as a result of
illness or injury occurring when the individual was in a licensed service shall
be reported.
3. Each instance Instances of seclusion or
restraint that does not comply with the human rights regulations or approved
variances or that results in injury to an individual shall be reported to the
individual's authorized representative and the assigned human rights advocate
within 24 hours shall be reported to the department as provided in
12VAC35-115-230 C 4.
E. A root cause analysis shall be conducted by the
provider within 30 days of discovery of Level II and Level III serious
incidents. The root cause analysis shall include at least the following
information: (i) a detailed description of what happened; (ii) an analysis of
why it happened, including identification of all identifiable underlying causes
of the incident that were under the control of the provider; and (iii)
identified solutions to mitigate its reoccurrence.
D. F. The provider shall submit, or make available,
reports and information that the department requires to establish compliance
with these regulations and applicable statutes.
E. G. Records that are confidential under
federal or state law shall be maintained as confidential by the department and
shall not be further disclosed except as required or permitted by law; however,
there shall be no right of access to communications that are privileged
pursuant to § 8.01-581.17 of the Code of Virginia.
F. H. Additional information requested by the
department if compliance with a regulation cannot be determined shall be
submitted within 10 business days of the issuance of the licensing report
requesting additional information. Extensions may be granted by the department
when requested prior to the due date, but extensions shall not exceed an
additional 10 business days.
G. I. Applicants and providers shall not submit
any misleading or false information to the department.
12VAC35-105-170. Corrective action plan.
A. If there is noncompliance with any applicable regulation
during an initial or ongoing review, inspection, or investigation, the
department shall issue a licensing report describing the noncompliance and
requesting the provider to submit a corrective action plan for each violation
cited.
B. The provider shall submit to the department and implement
a written corrective action plan for each regulation with which it is found
to be in violation as identified in the licensing report violation cited.
C. The corrective action plan shall include a:
1. Description Detailed description of the
corrective actions to be taken that will minimize the possibility that the
violation will occur again and correct any systemic deficiencies;
2. Date of completion for each corrective action; and
3. Signature of the person responsible for the service.
D. The provider shall submit a corrective action plan to the
department within 15 business days of the issuance of the licensing report. Extensions
One extension may be granted by the department when requested prior to
the due date, but extensions shall not exceed an additional 10 business days.
An immediate corrective action plan shall be required if the department
determines that the violations pose a danger to individuals receiving the
service.
E. Upon receipt of the corrective action plan, the department
shall review the plan and determine whether the plan is approved or not
approved. The provider has an additional 10 business days to submit a revised
corrective action plan after receiving a notice that the plan submitted has
not been approved by the department has not approved the revised plan.
If the submitted revised corrective action plan is still unacceptable, the
provider shall follow the dispute resolution process identified in this
section.
F. When the provider disagrees with a citation of a violation
or the disapproval of the revised corrective action plans, the provider
shall discuss this disagreement with the licensing specialist initially. If the
disagreement is not resolved, the provider may ask for a meeting with the
licensing specialist's supervisor, in consultation with the director of
licensing, to challenge a finding of noncompliance. The determination of the
director is final.
G. The provider shall monitor implementation of implement
and monitor the approved corrective action and include a plan for
monitoring plan. The provider shall incorporate corrective actions
in its quality assurance activities improvement program specified
in 12VAC30-105-620.
12VAC35-105-320. Fire inspections.
The provider shall document at the time of its original
application and annually thereafter that buildings and equipment in residential
service locations serving more than eight individuals are maintained in
accordance with the Virginia Statewide Fire Prevention Code (13VAC5-51). This
section does not apply to correctional facilities or home and noncenter-based
or sponsored residential home services. The provider shall evaluate each
individual and, based on that evaluation, shall provide appropriate environmental
supports and adequate staff to safely evacuate all individuals during an
emergency.
Article 3
Physical Environment of Residential/Inpatient Residential and
Inpatient Service Locations
12VAC35-105-330. Beds.
A. The provider shall not operate more beds than the number
for which its service location or locations are licensed.
B. A community ICF/MR An ICF/IID may not have
more than 12 beds at any one location. This applies to new applications for
services and not to existing services or locations licensed prior to December
7, 2011.
12VAC35-105-400. Criminal registry background
checks and registry searches.
A. Providers shall comply with the requirements for
obtaining criminal history background check requirements for direct care
positions checks as outlined in §§ 37.2-416, 37.2-506, and 37.2-607
of the Code of Virginia for individuals hired after July 1, 1999.
B. Prior to a new employee beginning his duties, the
provider shall obtain the employee's written consent and personal information necessary
to obtain a search of the registry of founded complaints of child abuse and
neglect maintained by the Virginia Department of Social Services.
C. B. The provider shall develop a written
policy for criminal history background checks and registry checks for
all employees, contractors, students, and volunteers searches. The
policy shall require at a minimum a disclosure statement from the employee,
contractor, student, or volunteer stating whether the person has ever been
convicted of or is the subject of pending charges for any offense and shall
address what actions the provider will take should it be discovered that an
employee, student, contractor, or volunteer a person has a founded
case of abuse or neglect or both, or a conviction or pending criminal charge.
D. C. The provider shall submit all information
required by the department to complete the criminal history background checks
and registry checks for all employees and for contractors, students, and
volunteers if required by the provider's policy searches.
E. D. The provider shall maintain the following
documentation:
1. The disclosure statement from the applicant stating
whether he has ever been convicted of or is the subject of pending charges for
any offense; and
2. Documentation that the provider submitted all information
required by the department to complete the criminal history background checks
and registry checks searches, memoranda from the department
transmitting the results to the provider, and the results from the Child
Protective Registry check search.
12VAC35-105-440. Orientation of new employees, contractors,
volunteers, and students.
New employees, contractors, volunteers, and students shall be
oriented commensurate with their function or job-specific responsibilities
within 15 business days. The provider shall document that the orientation
covers each of the following policies, procedures, and practices:
1. Objectives and philosophy of the provider;
2. Practices of confidentiality including access, duplication,
and dissemination of any portion of an individual's record;
3. Practices that assure an individual's rights including
orientation to human rights regulations;
4. Applicable personnel policies;
5. Emergency preparedness procedures;
6. Person-centeredness;
7. Infection control practices and measures; and
8. Other policies and procedures that apply to specific
positions and specific duties and responsibilities; and
9. Serious incident reporting, including when, how, and
under what circumstances a serious incident report must be submitted and the
consequences of failing to report a serious incident to the department in
accordance with this chapter.
12VAC35-105-450. Employee training and development.
The provider shall provide training and development
opportunities for employees to enable them to support the individuals served
receiving services and to carry out the their job
responsibilities of their jobs. The provider shall develop a training
policy that addresses the frequency of retraining on serious incident reporting,
medication administration, behavior intervention, emergency preparedness, and
infection control, to include flu epidemics. Employee participation in training
and development opportunities shall be documented and accessible to the
department.
12VAC35-105-460. Emergency medical or first aid training.
There shall be at least one employee or contractor on duty at
each location who holds a current certificate (i) issued by the American Red
Cross, the American Heart Association, or comparable authority in standard
first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) or (ii) as an emergency
medical technician. A licensed medical professional who holds a current
professional license shall be deemed to hold a current certificate in first
aid, but not in CPR. The certification process shall include a hands-on,
in-person demonstration of first aid and CPR competency.
Article 5
Health and Safety Management
12VAC35-105-520. Risk management.
A. The provider shall designate a person responsible for the
risk management function who has training and expertise in conducting
investigations, root cause analysis, and data analysis.
B. The provider shall implement a written plan to identify,
monitor, reduce, and minimize risks associated with harms and risk of
harm, including personal injury, infectious disease, property damage or
loss, and other sources of potential liability.
C. The provider shall conduct systemic risk assessment
reviews at least annually to identify and respond to practices, situations, and
policies that could result in the risk of harm to individuals receiving
services. The risk assessment review shall address (i) the environment of care;
(ii) clinical assessment or reassessment processes; (iii) staff competence and
adequacy of staffing; (iv) use of high risk procedures, including seclusion and
restraint; and (v) a review of serious incidents. This process shall
incorporate uniform risk triggers and thresholds as defined by the department.
C. D. The provider shall conduct and document
that a safety inspection has been performed at least annually of each service
location owned, rented, or leased by the provider. Recommendations for safety
improvement shall be documented and implemented by the provider.
D. E. The provider shall document serious
injuries to employees, contractors, students, volunteers, and visitors that
occur during the provision of a service or on the provider's property.
Documentation shall be kept on file for three years. The provider shall evaluate
serious injuries at least annually. Recommendations for improvement
shall be documented and implemented by the provider.
12VAC35-105-580. Service description requirements.
A. The provider shall develop, implement, review, and revise
its descriptions of services offered according to the provider's mission and
shall make service descriptions available for public review.
B. The provider shall outline how each service offers a
structured program of individualized interventions and care designed to meet
the individuals' physical and emotional needs; provide protection, guidance and
supervision; and meet the objectives of any required individualized services
plan.
C. The provider shall prepare a written description of each
service it offers. Elements of each service description shall include:
1. Service goals;
2. A description of care, treatment, training skills
acquisition, or other supports provided;
3. Characteristics and needs of individuals to be served
receive services;
4. Contract services, if any;
5. Eligibility requirements and admission, continued stay, and
exclusion criteria;
6. Service termination and discharge or transition criteria;
and
7. Type and role of employees or contractors.
D. The provider shall revise the written service description
whenever the operation of the service changes.
E. The provider shall not implement services that are
inconsistent with its most current service description.
F. The provider shall admit only those individuals whose
service needs are consistent with the service description, for whom services
are available, and for which staffing levels and types meet the needs of the
individuals served receiving services.
G. The provider shall provide for the physical separation of
children and adults in residential and inpatient services and shall provide
separate group programming for adults and children, except in the case of
family services. The provider shall provide for the safety of children
accompanying parents receiving services. Older adolescents transitioning from
school to adult activities may participate in mental retardation
(intellectual disability) developmental day support services with
adults.
H. The service description for substance abuse treatment
services shall address the timely and appropriate treatment of pregnant women
with substance abuse (substance use disorders).
I. If the provider plans to serve individuals as of a result
of a temporary detention order to a service, prior to admitting those
individuals to that service, the provider shall submit a written plan for
adequate staffing and security measures to ensure the individual can be
served receive services safely within the service to the department
for approval. If the plan is approved, the department will shall
add a stipulation to the license authorizing the provider to serve individuals
who are under temporary detention orders.
12VAC35-105-590. Provider staffing plan.
A. The provider shall implement a written staffing plan that
includes the types, roles, and numbers of employees and contractors that are
required to provide the service. This staffing plan shall reflect the:
1. Needs of the individuals served receiving
services;
2. Types of services offered;
3. The service description; and
4. Number of people individuals to be served
receive services at a given time; and
5. Adequate number of staff required to safely evacuate all
individuals during an emergency.
B. The provider shall develop a written transition staffing
plan for new services, added locations, and changes in capacity.
C. The provider shall meet the following staffing
requirements related to supervision.
1. The provider shall describe how employees, volunteers,
contractors, and student interns will be supervised in the staffing plan and
how that supervision will be documented.
2. Supervision of employees, volunteers, contractors, and
student interns shall be provided by persons who have experience in working
with individuals receiving services and in providing the services outlined in
the service description.
3. Supervision shall be appropriate to the services provided
and the needs of the individual. Supervision shall be documented.
4. Supervision shall include responsibility for approving
assessments and individualized services plans, as appropriate. This responsibility
may be delegated to an employee or contractor who meets the qualification for
supervision as defined in this section.
5. Supervision of mental health, substance abuse, or
co-occurring services that are of an acute or clinical nature such as outpatient,
inpatient, intensive in-home, or day treatment shall be provided by a licensed
mental health professional or a mental health professional who is
license-eligible and registered with a board of the Department of Health
Professions.
6. Supervision of mental health, substance abuse, or
co-occurring services that are of a supportive or maintenance nature, such as
psychosocial rehabilitation, or mental health supports,
shall be provided by a QMHP-A. An individual who is a QMHP-E may not
provide this type of supervision.
7. Supervision of mental retardation (intellectual
disability) developmental services shall be provided by a person
with at least one year of documented experience working directly with
individuals who have mental retardation (intellectual disability) or other
developmental disabilities and holds at least a bachelor's degree in a human
services field such as sociology, social work, special education,
rehabilitation counseling, nursing, or psychology. Experience may be
substituted for the education requirement.
8. Supervision of individual and family developmental
disabilities support (IFDDS) services shall be provided by a person possessing
at least one year of documented experience working directly with individuals
who have developmental disabilities and is one of the following: a doctor of
medicine or osteopathy licensed in Virginia; a registered nurse licensed in
Virginia; or a person holding at least a bachelor's degree in a human services
field such as sociology, social work, special education, rehabilitation
counseling, or psychology. Experience may be substituted for the education
requirement.
9. Supervision of brain injury services shall be
provided at a minimum by a clinician in the health professions field who is
trained and experienced in providing brain injury services to individuals who
have a brain injury diagnosis including: (i) a doctor of medicine or osteopathy
licensed in Virginia; (ii) a psychiatrist who is a doctor of medicine or
osteopathy specializing in psychiatry and licensed in Virginia; (iii) a
psychologist who has a master's degree in psychology from a college or
university with at least one year of clinical experience; (iv) a social worker
who has a bachelor's degree in human services or a related field (social work,
psychology, psychiatric evaluation, sociology, counseling, vocational
rehabilitation, human services counseling, or other degree deemed equivalent to
those described) from an accredited college or university with at least two
years of clinical experience providing direct services to individuals with a
diagnosis of brain injury; (v) a Certified Brain Injury Specialist; (vi) a
registered nurse licensed in Virginia with at least one year of clinical
experience; or (vii) any other licensed rehabilitation professional with one
year of clinical experience.
D. The provider shall employ or contract with persons with
appropriate training, as necessary, to meet the specialized needs of and to
ensure the safety of individuals being served receiving services
in residential services with medical or nursing needs; speech, language, or
hearing problems; or other needs where specialized training is necessary.
E. Providers of brain injury services shall employ or
contract with a neuropsychologist or licensed clinical psychologist
specializing in brain injury to assist, as appropriate, with initial
assessments, development of individualized services plans, crises, staff
training, and service design.
F. Direct care staff who provide brain injury services shall
have at least a high school diploma and two years of experience working with
individuals with disabilities or shall have successfully completed an approved
training curriculum on brain injuries within six months of employment.
12VAC35-105-620. Monitoring and evaluating service quality.
The provider shall develop and implement a quality
improvement program sufficient to identify, written policies and
procedures to monitor, and evaluate clinical and service
quality and effectiveness on a systematic and ongoing basis. The program
shall (i) include a quality improvement plan that is reviewed and updated at
least annually; (ii) establish measurable goals and objectives; (iii) include
and report on statewide performance measures, if applicable, as required by
DBHDS; (iv) utilize standard quality improvement tools, including root cause
analysis; (v) implement a process to regularly evaluate progress toward meeting
established goals and objectives; and (vi) incorporate any corrective action
plans pursuant to 12VAC35-105-170. Input from individuals receiving
services and their authorized representatives, if applicable, about services
used and satisfaction level of participation in the direction of service
planning shall be part of the provider's quality assurance system improvement
plan. The provider shall implement improvements, when indicated.
12VAC35-105-650. Assessment policy.
A. The provider shall implement a written assessment policy.
The policy shall define how assessments will be conducted and documented.
B. The provider shall actively involve the individual and
authorized representative, if applicable, in the preparation of initial and
comprehensive assessments and in subsequent reassessments. In these assessments
and reassessments, the provider shall consider the individual's needs,
strengths, goals, preferences, and abilities within the individual's cultural
context.
C. The assessment policy shall designate employees or
contractors who are responsible for conducting assessments. These employees or
contractors shall have experience in working with the needs of individuals who
are being assessed, the assessment tool or tools being utilized, and the
provision of services that the individuals may require.
D. Assessment is an ongoing activity. The provider shall make
reasonable attempts to obtain previous assessments or relevant history.
E. An assessment shall be initiated prior to or at admission
to the service. With the participation of the individual and the individual's
authorized representative, if applicable, the provider shall complete an
initial assessment detailed enough to determine whether the individual
qualifies for admission and to initiate an ISP for those individuals who are
admitted to the service. This assessment shall assess immediate service, health,
and safety needs, and at a minimum include the individual's:
1. Diagnosis;
2. Presenting needs including the individual's stated needs,
psychiatric needs, support needs, and the onset and duration of problems;
3. Current medical problems;
4. Current medications;
5. Current and past substance use or abuse, including
co-occurring mental health and substance abuse disorders; and
6. At-risk behavior to self and others.
F. A comprehensive assessment shall update and finalize the
initial assessment. The timing for completion of the comprehensive assessment
shall be based upon the nature and scope of the service but shall occur no
later than 30 days, after admission for providers of mental health and
substance abuse services and 60 days after admission for providers of mental
retardation (intellectual disability) and developmental disabilities
services. It shall address:
1. Onset and duration of problems;
2. Social, behavioral, developmental, and family history and
supports;
3. Cognitive functioning including strengths and weaknesses;
4. Employment, vocational, and educational background;
5. Previous interventions and outcomes;
6. Financial resources and benefits;
7. Health history and current medical care needs, to include:
a. Allergies;
b. Recent physical complaints and medical conditions;
c. Nutritional needs;
d. Chronic conditions;
e. Communicable diseases;
f. Restrictions on physical activities if any;
g. Restrictive protocols or special supervision
requirements;
h. Past serious illnesses, serious injuries, and
hospitalizations;
h. i. Serious illnesses and chronic conditions
of the individual's parents, siblings, and significant others in the same
household; and
i. j. Current and past substance use including
alcohol, prescription and nonprescription medications, and illicit drugs.
8. Psychiatric and substance use issues including current
mental health or substance use needs, presence of co-occurring disorders,
history of substance use or abuse, and circumstances that increase the
individual's risk for mental health or substance use issues;
9. History of abuse, neglect, sexual, or domestic violence, or
trauma including psychological trauma;
10. Legal status including authorized representative,
commitment, and representative payee status;
11. Relevant criminal charges or convictions and probation or
parole status;
12. Daily living skills;
13. Housing arrangements;
14. Ability to access services including transportation needs;
and
15. As applicable, and in all residential services, fall risk,
communication methods or needs, and mobility and adaptive equipment needs.
G. Providers of short-term intensive services including
inpatient and crisis stabilization services shall develop policies for
completing comprehensive assessments within the time frames appropriate for
those services.
H. Providers of non-intensive or short-term services shall
meet the requirements for the initial assessment at a minimum. Non-intensive
services are services provided in jails, nursing homes, or other locations when
access to records and information is limited by the location and nature of the
services. Short-term services typically are provided for less than 60 days.
I. Providers may utilize standardized state or federally
sanctioned assessment tools that do not meet all the criteria of
12VAC35-105-650 as the initial or comprehensive assessment tools as long as the
tools assess the individual's health and safety issues and substantially meet
the requirements of this section.
J. Individuals who receive medication-only services shall be
reassessed at least annually to determine whether there is a change in the need
for additional services and the effectiveness of the medication.
12VAC35-105-660. Individualized services plan (ISP).
A. The provider shall actively involve the individual and
authorized representative, as appropriate, in the development, review, and
revision of a person-centered ISP. The individualized services planning process
shall be consistent with laws protecting confidentiality, privacy, human rights
of individuals receiving services, and rights of minors.
B. The provider shall develop and implement an initial
person-centered ISP for the first 60 days for mental retardation
(intellectual disability) and developmental disabilities services or
for the first 30 days for mental health and substance abuse services. This ISP
shall be developed and implemented within 24 hours of admission to address
immediate service, health, and safety needs and shall continue in effect until
the ISP is developed or the individual is discharged, whichever comes first.
C. The provider shall implement a person-centered
comprehensive ISP as soon as possible after admission based upon the nature and
scope of services but no later than 30 days after admission for providers of
mental health and substance abuse services and 60 days after admission for
providers of mental retardation (intellectual disability) and
developmental disabilities services.
D. The initial ISP and the comprehensive ISP shall be
developed based on the respective assessment with the participation and
informed choice of the individual receiving services. To ensure the
individual's participation and informed choice, the provider shall explain to
the individual or his authorized representative, as applicable, in a reasonable
and comprehensible manner, the proposed services to be delivered, alternative
services that might be advantageous for the individual, and accompanying risks
or benefits. The provider shall clearly document that this information was
explained to the individual or his authorized representative and the reasons
the individual or his authorized representative chose the option included in
the ISP.
12VAC35-105-665. ISP requirements.
A. The comprehensive ISP shall be based on the individual's
needs, strengths, abilities, personal preferences, goals, and natural supports
identified in the assessment. The ISP shall include:
1. Relevant and attainable goals, measurable objectives, and
specific strategies for addressing each need;
2. Services and supports and frequency of services required to
accomplish the goals including relevant psychological, mental health, substance
abuse, behavioral, medical, rehabilitation, training, and nursing needs and
supports;
3. The role of the individual and others in implementing the
service plan;
4. A communication plan for individuals with communication
barriers, including language barriers;
5. A behavioral support or treatment plan, if applicable;
6. A safety plan that addresses identified risks to the
individual or to others, including a fall risk plan;
7. A crisis or relapse plan, if applicable;
8. Target dates for accomplishment of goals and objectives;
9. Identification of employees or contractors responsible for
coordination and integration of services, including employees of other
agencies; and
10. Recovery plans, if applicable; and
11. Services the individual elects to self direct, if
applicable.
B. The ISP shall be signed and dated at a minimum by the
person responsible for implementing the plan and the individual receiving
services or the authorized representative in order to document agreement.
If the signature of the individual receiving services or the authorized
representative cannot be obtained, the provider shall document his attempt
attempts to obtain the necessary signature and the reason why he was
unable to obtain it. The ISP shall be distributed to the individual and
others authorized to receive it.
C. The provider shall designate a person who will shall
be responsible for developing, implementing, reviewing, and revising each
individual's ISP in collaboration with the individual or authorized
representative, as appropriate.
D. Employees or contractors who are responsible for
implementing the ISP shall demonstrate a working knowledge of the objectives
and strategies contained in the individual's current ISP.
E. Providers of short-term intensive services such as
inpatient and crisis stabilization services that are typically provided
for less than 30 days shall implement a policy to develop an ISP within a
timeframe consistent with the length of stay of individuals.
F. The ISP shall be consistent with the plan of care for
individuals served by the IFDDS Waiver.
G. When a provider provides more than one service to
an individual the provider may maintain a single ISP document that contains
individualized objectives and strategies for each service provided.
H. G. Whenever possible the identified goals in
the ISP shall be written in the words of the individual receiving services.
12VAC35-105-675. Reassessments and ISP reviews.
A. Reassessments shall be completed at least annually and when
any time there is a need based on changes in the medical,
psychiatric, or behavioral, or other status of the individual.
B. Providers shall complete changes to the ISP as a result
of the assessments.
C. The provider shall update the ISP at least annually
and any time assessments identify risks, injuries, needs, or a change in
status of the individual.
D. The provider shall review the ISP at least every
three months from the date of the implementation of the ISP or whenever there
is a revised assessment based upon the individual's changing needs or goals.
1. These reviews shall evaluate the individual's progress
toward meeting the plan's ISP's goals and objectives and the
continued relevance of the ISP's objectives and strategies. The provider shall
update the goals, objectives, and strategies contained in the ISP, if
indicated, and implement any updates made.
2. These reviews shall document evidence of progression
toward or achievement of a specific targeted outcome for each goal and
objective.
3. For goals and objectives that were not accomplished by
the identified target date, the provider and any appropriate treatment team
members shall meet to review the reasons for lack of progress and provide the
individual an opportunity to make an informed choice of how to proceed.
12VAC35-105-691. Transition of individuals among service.
A. The provider shall implement written procedures that
define the process for transitioning an individual between or among services
operated by the provider. At a minimum the policy shall address:
1. The process by which the provider will assure continuity of
services during and following transition;
2. The participation of the individual or his authorized
representative, as applicable, in the decision to move and in the planning for
transfer;
3. The process and timeframe for transferring the access to
individual's record and ISP to the destination location;
4. The process and timeframe for completing the transfer
summary; and
5. The process and timeframe for transmitting or accessing,
where applicable, discharge summaries to the destination service.
B. The transfer summary shall include at a minimum the
following:
1. Reason for the individual's transfer;
2. Documentation of involvement informed choice
by the individual or his authorized representative, as applicable, in the
decision to and planning for the transfer;
3. Current psychiatric and known medical conditions or issues
of the individual and the identity of the individual's health care providers;
4. Updated progress of the individual in meeting goals and
objectives in his ISP;
5. Emergency medical information;
6. Dosages of all currently prescribed medications and
over-the-counter medications used by the individual when prescribed by the
provider or known by the case manager;
7. Transfer date; and
8. Signature of employee or contractor responsible for
preparing the transfer summary.
C. The transfer summary may be documented in the individual's
progress notes or in information easily accessible within an electronic health
record.
Article 6
Behavior Interventions
12VAC35-105-800. Policies and procedures on behavior
interventions and supports.
A. The provider shall implement written policies and
procedures that describe the use of behavior interventions, including
seclusion, restraint, and time out. The policies and procedures shall:
1. Be consistent with applicable federal and state laws and
regulations;
2. Emphasize positive approaches to behavior interventions;
3. List and define behavior interventions in the order of
their relative degree of intrusiveness or restrictiveness and the conditions
under which they may be used in each service for each individual;
4. Protect the safety and well-being of the individual at all
times, including during fire and other emergencies;
5. Specify the mechanism for monitoring the use of behavior
interventions; and
6. Specify the methods for documenting the use of behavior interventions.
B. Employees and contractors trained in behavior support
interventions shall implement and monitor all behavior interventions.
C. Policies and procedures related to behavior interventions
shall be available to individuals, their families, authorized representatives,
and advocates. Notification of policies does not need to occur in correctional
facilities.
D. Individuals receiving services shall not discipline,
restrain, seclude, or implement behavior interventions on other individuals
receiving services.
E. Injuries resulting from or occurring during the
implementation of behavior interventions seclusion or restraint
shall be recorded in the individual's services record and reported to
the assigned human rights advocate and the employee or contractor
responsible for the overall coordination of services department as
provided in 12VAC35-115-230 C.
12VAC35-105-830. Seclusion, restraint, and time out.
A. The use of seclusion, restraint, and time out shall comply
with applicable federal and state laws and regulations and be consistent with
the provider's policies and procedures.
B. Devices used for mechanical restraint shall be designed
specifically for emergency behavior management of human beings in
clinical or therapeutic programs.
C. Application of time out, seclusion, or restraint shall be
documented in the individual's record and include the following:
1. Physician's order for seclusion or mechanical restraint or
chemical restraint;
2. Date and time;
3. Employees or contractors involved;
4. Circumstances and reasons for use including other emergency
behavior management techniques attempted;
5. Duration;
6. Type of technique used; and
7. Outcomes, including documentation of debriefing of the
individual and staff involved following the incident.
Article 3
Services in Department of Corrections Correctional Facilities
12VAC35-105-1140. Clinical and security coordination.
A. The provider shall have formal and informal methods of
resolving procedural and programmatic issues regarding individual care arising
between the clinical and security employees or contractors.
B. The provider shall demonstrate ongoing communication
between clinical and security employees to ensure individual care.
C. The provider shall provide cross-training for the clinical
and security employees or contractors that includes:
1. Mental health, mental retardation (intellectual
disability) developmental disability, and substance abuse education;
2. Use of clinical and security restraints; and
3. Channels of communication.
D. Employees or contractors shall receive periodic in-service
training, and have knowledge of and be able to demonstrate the appropriate use
of clinical and security restraint.
E. Security and behavioral assessments shall be completed at
the time of admission to determine service eligibility and at least weekly for
the safety of individuals, other persons, employees, and visitors.
F. Personal grooming and care services for individuals shall
be a cooperative effort between the clinical and security employees or
contractors.
G. Clinical needs and security level shall be considered when
arrangements are made regarding privacy for individual contact with family and
attorneys.
H. Living quarters shall be assigned on the basis of the
individual's security level and clinical needs.
I. An assessment of the individual's clinical condition and
needs shall be made when disciplinary action or restrictions are required for
infractions of security measures.
J. Clinical services consistent with the individual's
condition and plan of treatment shall be provided when security detention or
isolation is imposed.
12VAC35-105-1245. Case management direct assessments.
Case managers shall meet with each individual face to face
as dictated by the individual's needs. At face-to-face meetings, the case
manager shall (i) observe and assess for any previously unidentified risks,
injuries, needs, or other changes in status; (ii) assess the status of previously
identified risks, injuries, or needs, or other changes in status; (iii) assess
whether the individual's service plan is being implemented appropriately and
remains appropriate for the individual; and (iv) assess whether supports and
services are being implemented consistent with the individual's strengths and
preferences and in the most integrated setting appropriate to the individual's
needs.
12VAC35-105-1250. Qualifications of case management employees
or contractors.
A. Employees or contractors providing case management
services shall have knowledge of:
1. Services and systems available in the community including
primary health care, support services, eligibility criteria and intake
processes and generic community resources;
2. The nature of serious mental illness, mental retardation
(intellectual disability) developmental disability, substance abuse
(substance use disorders), or co-occurring disorders depending on the
individuals served receiving services, including clinical and
developmental issues;
3. Different types of assessments, including functional
assessment, and their uses in service planning;
4. Treatment modalities and intervention techniques, such as
behavior management, independent living skills training, supportive counseling,
family education, crisis intervention, discharge planning, and service
coordination;
5. Types of mental health, developmental, and substance abuse
programs available in the locality;
6. The service planning process and major components of a
service plan;
7. The use of medications in the care or treatment of the
population served; and
8. All applicable federal and state laws and regulations and
local ordinances.
B. Employees or contractors providing case management
services shall have skills in:
1. Identifying and documenting an individual's need for
resources, services, and other supports;
2. Using information from assessments, evaluations,
observation, and interviews to develop service plans;
3. Identifying and documenting how resources,
services, and natural supports such as family can be utilized to promote
achievement of an individual's personal habilitative or rehabilitative and life
goals; and
4. Coordinating the provision of services by diverse public
and private providers.
C. Employees or contractors providing case management
services shall have abilities to:
1. Work as team members, maintaining effective inter- and
intra-agency working relationships;
2. Work independently performing position duties under general
supervision; and
3. Engage in and sustain ongoing relationships with
individuals receiving services.
D. Case managers serving individuals with developmental
disability shall complete the DBHDS core competency-based curriculum within 30
days of hire.
Article 7
Intensive Community Treatment and Program of Assertive Community Treatment
Services
12VAC35-105-1360. Admission and discharge criteria.
A. Individuals must meet the following admission criteria:
1. Diagnosis of a severe and persistent mental illness, predominantly
schizophrenia, other psychotic disorder, or bipolar disorder that seriously
impairs functioning in the community. Individuals with a sole diagnosis of
substance addiction or abuse or mental retardation (intellectual disability)
developmental disability are not eligible for services.
2. Significant challenges to community integration without
intensive community support including persistent or recurrent difficulty with
one or more of the following:
a. Performing practical daily living tasks;
b. Maintaining employment at a self-sustaining level or
consistently carrying out homemaker roles; or
c. Maintaining a safe living situation.
3. High service needs indicated due to one or more of the
following:
a. Residence in a state hospital or other psychiatric hospital
but clinically assessed to be able to live in a more independent situation if
intensive services were provided or anticipated to require extended
hospitalization, if more intensive services are not available;
b. Multiple admissions to or at least one recent long-term
stay (30 days or more) in a state hospital or other acute psychiatric hospital
inpatient setting within the past two years; or a recent history of more than
four interventions by psychiatric emergency services per year;
c. Persistent or very recurrent severe major symptoms (e.g.,
affective, psychotic, suicidal);
d. Co-occurring substance addiction or abuse of significant
duration (e.g., greater than six months);
e. High risk or a recent history (within the past six months)
of criminal justice involvement (e.g., arrest or incarceration);
f. Ongoing difficulty meeting basic survival needs or residing
in substandard housing, homeless, or at imminent risk of becoming homeless; or
g. Inability to consistently participate in traditional
office-based services.
B. Individuals receiving PACT or ICT services should not be
discharged for failure to comply with treatment plans or other expectations of
the provider, except in certain circumstances as outlined. Individuals must
meet at least one of the following criteria to be discharged:
1. Change in the individual's residence to a location out of
the service area;
2. Death of the individual;
3. Incarceration of the individual for a period to exceed a
year or long term hospitalization (more than one year); however, the provider
is expected to prioritize these individuals for PACT or ICT services upon their
the individual's anticipated return to the community if the individual
wishes to return to services and the service level is appropriate to his needs;
4. Choice of the individual with the provider responsible for
revising the ISP to meet any concerns of the individual leading to the choice
of discharge; or
5. Significant sustained recovery by the individual in all
major role areas with minimal team contact and support for at least two years
as determined by both the individual and ICT or PACT team.
VA.R. Doc. No. R18-4381; Filed July 12, 2018, 9:52 a.m.