130 CMR, § 415.419

Current through Register 1533, October 25, 2024
Section 415.419 - Discharge-planning Standards
(A)Staff.
(1) The hospital must assign in writing the responsibility for all patient discharge planning to one appropriate department (such as social services or continuing care). That department in turn must designate specific staff members whose primary duties are discharge-planning.
(2) The discharge-planning staff must include either a registered nurse or a social worker who is licensed or eligible and applying for licensure in Massachusetts, and is under the supervision of, or in consultation with, a licensed graduate-level nurse or social worker.
(3) Unless permitted a lower ratio by the MassHealth agency, the hospital must employ one discharge planner or full-time equivalent for every 60 licensed beds, excluding maternity and special-care units. Visiting Nurse Association (VNA) or home health staff who are not employed by the hospital, but who regularly perform discharge-planning activities there, may be included in this ratio.
(4) The hospital must demonstrate to the MassHealth agency that it provides formal in-service training programs and regular case conferences for all discharge-planning staff and all other personnel who affect the discharge-planning process.
(B)Operations and Procedures.
(1) The discharge-planning staff must maintain a chronological list, updated daily, of all members on administrative day status. The list must contain the date administrative day status commenced and a recommendation for institutional or noninstitutional care upon discharge based on nursing facility medical eligibility criteria. The discharge-planning department must use this chronological list to ensure that members who have spent the longest time on administrative day status receive priority in placement attempts.
(2) The discharge-planning department must maintain up-to-date lists of the following:
(a) all licensed nursing facilities within a 25-mile minimum radius of the hospital. This list must show, for each facility, the number of beds, whether the facility is Medicare certified, whether the facility is Medicaid certified, any other notable characteristics (for example, the availability of bilingual staff), and the name of the individual who is responsible for admissions; and
(b) all community-based organizations and resources within a 25-mile minimum radius of the hospital that provide services and support to members discharged to the community. Such resources include, but are not limited to, housing for the elderly, home health agencies, homemaker services, transportation services, friendly visitor programs, and meal programs.
(3) As a routine practice, admissions data, including but not limited to age and diagnosis, must be screened by discharge-planning staff within 24 hours of admission in accordance with written criteria that identify pertinent patient characteristics and any high-risk diagnoses. Discharge-planning activities must then commence within 72 working hours of admission for every member expected to require posthospital care or services. Admissions data must be noted in the member's record in the discharge-planning department. The written criteria used to screen members must be available to the MassHealth agency.
(4) The hospital must ensure that a clinician, certified in accordance with 130 CMR 415.420, completes a CANS during the discharge planning process for those members under the age of 21 who are receiving services in a DMH-licensed bed.
(5) The hospital must have a written policy that allows discharge-planning staff access to all members and their medical records. If such access is medically contraindicated, the member's physician must sign a statement specifying the reason for the contraindication and the hospital must maintain the statement in the member's medical or discharge-planning record.
(6) The discharge-planning staff and the primary-care team must coordinate and document in writing a plan for each member who requires posthospital care that specifies the services or care expected to be required by the member, the frequency, intensity, and duration of such services, and the resources available to provide the care or services, including available family and community support. The plan must be updated if the member's condition changes significantly. If an institutional placement for the member is recommended upon discharge, the plan must state why available community resources are inadequate to meet the member's needs.
(7) Each visit to a member by a member of the discharge-planning staff must be noted in the member's discharge-planning record. The notation must include the date of the meeting, any discharge options discussed, any particular problems noted, any agreements reached with the member, and the future activities of the discharge-planning staff to address the problems raised or to continue preparation of the member for discharge.
(8) Whenever possible, the discharge-planning staff or primary-care team must contact the member's family to encourage its involvement in planning the member's discharge. To this end, family members must be informed of the discharge options and community resources available to the member and provided with lists of nursing facilities and community resources in the area. When possible, these meetings or telephone consultations with the family must be held once every two weeks until the member is discharged. The dates of these meetings and other contacts with family, matters discussed, problems identified, and agreements reached must be entered on the member's discharge-planning record.
(9) The hospital must have written procedures for arranging posthospital services for members. At a minimum, these procedures must include frequent, systematic contacts (usually, three times weekly) by telephone or in person to all nursing facilities and community-service providers within a 25-mile minimum radius of the hospital in order to
(a) determine what services at that location are or will soon become available and to ensure that the provider has current information, including medical and psychosocial status, on any member now or soon needing placement; and
(b) arrange for placement or services or both for members awaiting discharge. These member-specific contacts must be documented as to their number, frequency, and outcome, and must be made by a registered nurse or by a social worker who is licensed or eligible and applying for licensure in Massachusetts. The only exception in which such a call may be made by another person is when that person regularly works in the discharge-planning department, has received training in patient placement from a discharge planner, and consults all the relevant discharge documentation for the member when making the call. If, during the call, a question is asked that cannot be answered from the written data, it must be referred to a discharge planner.
(C)Nursing Facility Medical Eligibility Criteria.
(1) The member's physician and a registered nurse must determine eligibility for institutional or noninstitutional care required by a member upon discharge in accordance with MassHealth nursing facility medical eligibility criteria. Both the member's medical and discharge-planning records must include the specific factors that indicate the recommended care and the names of the persons who determined it.
(2) For any member on administrative day status, the recommended care must be reassessed at least once every two weeks and whenever a significant change occurs in the member's medical or psychosocial condition. The date of each reassessment and the name of the person or persons making the reassessment must be noted in both the member's medical and discharge-planning records.
(D)Cooperation with Long-term-care Preadmission Screening Program. In areas of the state where the MassHealth agency or its agent administers a preadmission screening program for long-term-care medical eligibility, the hospital must forward all required documentation to the MassHealth agency or its agent and must request long-term-care medical eligibility authorization before the member may be discharged. The hospital may seek the assistance of the MassHealth agency or its agent in finding placements for members on administrative day status. For those members on administrative day status, the hospital must allow the MassHealth agency or its agent access to the medical record.
(E)Reporting Discrimination Against Members. The hospital must have a formal written policy for the discharge-planning staff to use when reporting to the MassHealth agency all suspected cases of discrimination against members by MassHealth providers.
(F)Recordkeeping Requirements. The hospital must maintain a record of administrative days for four years. The hospital must maintain copies of the CANS completed in accordance with 130 CMR 415.419(B)(4) in the member's medical record.
(G)Disclosure Requirements. All written procedures and policies, lists, review criteria, discharge plans, and records used by the discharge-planning department in performing its duties must be made available for inspection by the MassHealth agency.

130 CMR, § 415.419

Amended by Mass Register Issue S1277, eff. 1/2/2015.