Conn. Agencies Regs. § 19-13-D76 - Quality assurance program
(a) An agency shall
have a written quality assurance program which shall include but not be limited
to the following components:
(1) Program
evaluation;
(2) Quarterly clinical
record review;
(3) Annual
documentation of clinical competence;
(4) Annual process and outcome record
audits.
(b) The
professional advisory committee or a committee appointed by the governing
authority and at least one person from administrative or supervisory staff
shall implement, monitor and integrate the various components of the agency's
quality assurance program.
(c) The
committee and staff designated pursuant to regulation 19-13-D76 (b) shall:
(1) Annually analyze and summarize, in
writing, all findings and recommendations of the quality assurance
program;
(2) Present written
reports of the findings of each component or a written summary report of the
findings of the quality assurance program to the professional advisory
committee and to the governing authority;
(3) Monitor implementation of the
recommendations and actions directed by the governing authority based on said
report(s);
(4) Within one hundred
twenty (120) days of action on the report(s) by the governing authority, report
in writing to the governing authority, administration and professional advisory
committee the progress in implementation of the recommended actions;
(5) Ensure that a copy of the annual quality
assurance report(s) and the progress report on implementation are maintained by
the agency.
(d) The
program evaluation shall include, but not be limited to:
(1) The extent to which the agency's
objectives, policies and resources are adequate to maintain programs and
services appropriate to community, patient and family needs;
(2) The extent to which the agency's
administrative practices and patterns for delivery of services achieve
efficient and effective community, patient and family services in a five (5)
year cycle.
(e) At least
quarterly, health professionals in active practice, representing at least the
scope of the agency's home health care services shall review a sample of active
and closed clinical records to assure that agency policies are followed in
providing services. No person involved directly in service to a patient or
family shall participate in the review of that patient or family's clinical
record.
(1) At least once in each calendar
quarter, the agency shall select records for review by a random sampling of all
therapeutic cases. The agency's sampling methodology shall be defined in its
quality assurance program policies and procedures after approval by the
commissioner. The sample of clinical records reviewed each quarter shall be
according to the following ratios:
(A) Eighty
(80) or less cases; eight (8) records;
(B) Eighty-one (81) or more cases, ten
percent (10%) of caseload for the quarter to maximum of twenty-five (25)
records. One review form describing the areas to be assessed shall be completed
for each record reviewed.
(f) Six (6) months after employment and
annually thereafter, a written report shall be prepared on the clinical
competence of each direct service staff member employed by or under individual
contract to the agency by the employee's professional supervisor, which shall
include but not be limited to:
(1) Direct
observation of clinical performance;
(2) Patient and family management as recorded
in clinical notes and reports prepared by the staff member;
(3) Case management conference
performance;
(4) Participation in
the agency's inservice education program;
(5) Personal continuing education;
(6) Each staff member shall review and sign a
copy of his/her performance evaluation and the agency shall maintain copies of
same in the employee's personnel file;
(7) Unsatisfactory performance of direct
service staff shall require a plan for corrective action which shall be filed
in the employee's personnel folder. In the case of a homemaker-home health
aide, the corrective action shall include that the homemaker-home health aide
may not perform any task rated as "unsatisfactory" without direct supervision
by a registered nurse until after he or she receives training in the task for
which he or she was evaluated as "unsatisfactory" and passes a subsequent
evaluation with "'satisfactory."
(g)
Effective January 1, 1982, an
agency shall:
(1) Include in its
quality assurance program annual process and outcome audits of a sample of the
clinical records of persons served during the previous twelve (12)
months;
(2) Have defined outcome
measures for at least two (2) of any diagnostic category representing five (5%)
percent or more of its annual caseload. For each successive twelve (12) month
period after January 1, 1982, the agency shall expand its outcome measures by
one diagnostic category, until measures have been defined for each diagnostic
category representing five (5%) percent or more of the agency's caseload;
or
(3) Have received approval from
the commissioner to use another patient classification system to define outcome
measures.
Notes
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