Bill Text: CA SB1228 | 2011-2012 | Regular Session | Amended
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Small house skilled nursing facilities.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 3-0)
Status: (Passed) 2012-09-27 - Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 671, Statutes of 2012. [SB1228 Detail]
Download: California-2011-SB1228-Amended.html
Bill Title: Small house skilled nursing facilities.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 3-0)
Status: (Passed) 2012-09-27 - Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 671, Statutes of 2012. [SB1228 Detail]
Download: California-2011-SB1228-Amended.html
BILL NUMBER: SB 1228 AMENDED BILL TEXT AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 1, 2012 INTRODUCED BY Senator Alquist FEBRUARY 23, 2012 An act to amend Section 1250 of, and to add Article 7.2 (commencing with Section 1323.5) to Chapter 2 of Division 2 of, the Health and Safety Code, relating to small house skilled nursing facilities. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST SB 1228, as amended, Alquist. Small house skilled nursing facilities. Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of health facilities, including skilled nursing facilities, as defined, by the State Department of Public Health. Violation of these provisions is a crime. This bill, commencing January 1, 2014, would create a new health facility licensing category for a small house skilled nursing facility, defined by the bill as a skilled nursing facility that is either a stand-alone home or that consists of more than one home for the purposes of providing skilled nursing care in a homelike, noninstitutional setting. The bill would require that these facilities comply with applicable state law governing skilled nursing facilities, except as specified. The bill would require the department to review license applications and render a decision within 6 months of receipt. The bill would require the department and the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development to consult withaspecifiedentityentities on various aspects of small house skilled nursing facilities. The bill would require the department to adopt regulations implementing these provisions. By expanding the scope of a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement. This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason. Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes. THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 1. Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read: 1250. As used in this chapter, "health facility" means any facility, place, or building that is organized, maintained, and operated for the diagnosis, care, prevention, and treatment of human illness, physical or mental, including convalescence and rehabilitation and including care during and after pregnancy, or for any one or more of these purposes, for one or more persons, to which the persons are admitted for a 24-hour stay or longer, and includes the following types: (a) "General acute care hospital" means a health facility having a duly constituted governing body with overall administrative and professional responsibility and an organized medical staff that provides 24-hour inpatient care, including the following basic services: medical, nursing, surgical, anesthesia, laboratory, radiology, pharmacy, and dietary services. A general acute care hospital may include more than one physical plant maintained and operated on separate premises as provided in Section 1250.8. A general acute care hospital that exclusively provides acute medical rehabilitation center services, including at least physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy, may provide for the required surgical and anesthesia services through a contract with another acute care hospital. In addition, a general acute care hospital that, on July 1, 1983, provided required surgical and anesthesia services through a contract or agreement with another acute care hospital may continue to provide these surgical and anesthesia services through a contract or agreement with an acute care hospital. The general acute care hospital operated by the State Department of Developmental Services at Agnews Developmental Center may, until June 30, 2007, provide surgery and anesthesia services through a contract or agreement with another acute care hospital. Notwithstanding the requirements of this subdivision, a general acute care hospital operated by the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation or the Department of Veterans Affairs may provide surgery and anesthesia services during normal weekday working hours, and not provide these services during other hours of the weekday or on weekends or holidays, if the general acute care hospital otherwise meets the requirements of this section. A "general acute care hospital" includes a "rural general acute care hospital." However, a "rural general acute care hospital" shall not be required by the department to provide surgery and anesthesia services. A "rural general acute care hospital" shall meet either of the following conditions: (1) The hospital meets criteria for designation within peer group six or eight, as defined in the report entitled Hospital Peer Grouping for Efficiency Comparison, dated December 20, 1982. (2) The hospital meets the criteria for designation within peer group five or seven, as defined in the report entitled Hospital Peer Grouping for Efficiency Comparison, dated December 20, 1982, and has no more than 76 acute care beds and is located in a census dwelling place of 15,000 or less population according to the 1980 federal census. (b) "Acute psychiatric hospital" means a health facility having a duly constituted governing body with overall administrative and professional responsibility and an organized medical staff that provides 24-hour inpatient care for mentally disordered, incompetent, or other patients referred to in Division 5 (commencing with Section 5000) or Division 6 (commencing with Section 6000) of the Welfare and Institutions Code, including the following basic services: medical, nursing, rehabilitative, pharmacy, and dietary services. (c) (1) "Skilled nursing facility" means a health facility that provides skilled nursing care and supportive care to patients whose primary need is for availability of skilled nursing care on an extended basis. (2) "Skilled nursing facility" includes a "small house skilled nursing facility (SHSNF)," as defined in Section 1323.5. (d) "Intermediate care facility" means a health facility that provides inpatient care to ambulatory or nonambulatory patients who have recurring need for skilled nursing supervision and need supportive care, but who do not require availability of continuous skilled nursing care. (e) "Intermediate care facility/developmentally disabled habilitative" means a facility with a capacity of 4 to 15 beds that provides 24-hour personal care, habilitation, developmental, and supportive health services to 15 or fewer persons with developmental disabilities who have intermittent recurring needs for nursing services, but have been certified by a physician and surgeon as not requiring availability of continuous skilled nursing care. (f) "Special hospital" means a health facility having a duly constituted governing body with overall administrative and professional responsibility and an organized medical or dental staff that provides inpatient or outpatient care in dentistry or maternity. (g) "Intermediate care facility/developmentally disabled" means a facility that provides 24-hour personal care, habilitation, developmental, and supportive health services to persons with developmental disabilities whose primary need is for developmental services and who have a recurring but intermittent need for skilled nursing services. (h) "Intermediate care facility/developmentally disabled-nursing" means a facility with a capacity of 4 to 15 beds that provides 24-hour personal care, developmental services, and nursing supervision for persons with developmental disabilities who have intermittent recurring needs for skilled nursing care but have been certified by a physician and surgeon as not requiring continuous skilled nursing care. The facility shall serve medically fragile persons with developmental disabilities or who demonstrate significant developmental delay that may lead to a developmental disability if not treated. (i) (1) "Congregate living health facility" means a residential home with a capacity, except as provided in paragraph (4), of no more than 12 beds, that provides inpatient care, including the following basic services: medical supervision, 24-hour skilled nursing and supportive care, pharmacy, dietary, social, recreational, and at least one type of service specified in paragraph (2). The primary need of congregate living health facility residents shall be for availability of skilled nursing care on a recurring, intermittent, extended, or continuous basis. This care is generally less intense than that provided in general acute care hospitals but more intense than that provided in skilled nursing facilities. (2) Congregate living health facilities shall provide one of the following services: (A) Services for persons who are mentally alert, persons with physical disabilities, who may be ventilator dependent. (B) Services for persons who have a diagnosis of terminal illness, a diagnosis of a life-threatening illness, or both. Terminal illness means the individual has a life expectancy of six months or less as stated in writing by his or her attending physician and surgeon. A "life-threatening illness" means the individual has an illness that can lead to a possibility of a termination of life within five years or less as stated in writing by his or her attending physician and surgeon. (C) Services for persons who are catastrophically and severely disabled. A person who is catastrophically and severely disabled means a person whose origin of disability was acquired through trauma or nondegenerative neurologic illness, for whom it has been determined that active rehabilitation would be beneficial and to whom these services are being provided. Services offered by a congregate living health facility to a person who is catastrophically disabled shall include, but not be limited to, speech, physical, and occupational therapy. (3) A congregate living health facility license shall specify which of the types of persons described in paragraph (2) to whom a facility is licensed to provide services. (4) (A) A facility operated by a city and county for the purposes of delivering services under this section may have a capacity of 59 beds. (B) A congregate living health facility not operated by a city and county servicing persons who are terminally ill, persons who have been diagnosed with a life-threatening illness, or both, that is located in a county with a population of 500,000 or more persons, or located in a county of the 16th class pursuant to Section 28020 of the Government Code, may have not more than 25 beds for the purpose of serving persons who are terminally ill. (C) A congregate living health facility not operated by a city and county serving persons who are catastrophically and severely disabled, as defined in subparagraph (C) of paragraph (2) that is located in a county of 500,000 or more persons may have not more than 12 beds for the purpose of serving persons who are catastrophically and severely disabled. (5) A congregate living health facility shall have a noninstitutional, homelike environment. (j) (1) "Correctional treatment center" means a health facility operated by the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Facilities, or a county, city, or city and county law enforcement agency that, as determined by the state department, provides inpatient health services to that portion of the inmate population who do not require a general acute care level of basic services. This definition shall not apply to those areas of a law enforcement facility that houses inmates or wards that may be receiving outpatient services and are housed separately for reasons of improved access to health care, security, and protection. The health services provided by a correctional treatment center shall include, but are not limited to, all of the following basic services: physician and surgeon, psychiatrist, psychologist, nursing, pharmacy, and dietary. A correctional treatment center may provide the following services: laboratory, radiology, perinatal, and any other services approved by the state department. (2) Outpatient surgical care with anesthesia may be provided, if the correctional treatment center meets the same requirements as a surgical clinic licensed pursuant to Section 1204, with the exception of the requirement that patients remain less than 24 hours. (3) Correctional treatment centers shall maintain written service agreements with general acute care hospitals to provide for those inmate physical health needs that cannot be met by the correctional treatment center. (4) Physician and surgeon services shall be readily available in a correctional treatment center on a 24-hour basis. (5) It is not the intent of the Legislature to have a correctional treatment center supplant the general acute care hospitals at the California Medical Facility, the California Men's Colony, and the California Institution for Men. This subdivision shall not be construed to prohibit the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation from obtaining a correctional treatment center license at these sites. (k) "Nursing facility" means a health facility licensed pursuant to this chapter that is certified to participate as a provider of care either as a skilled nursing facility in the federal Medicare Program under Title XVIII of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1395 et seq.) or as a nursing facility in the federal Medicaid Program under Title XIX of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396 et seq.) , or as both. (l) Regulations defining a correctional treatment center described in subdivision (j) that is operated by a county, city, or city and county, the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, or the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Facilities, shall not become effective prior to, or if effective, shall be inoperative until January 1, 1996, and until that time these correctional facilities are exempt from any licensing requirements. (m) "Intermediate care facility/developmentally disabled-continuous nursing (ICF/DD-CN)" means a homelike facility with a capacity of four to eight, inclusive, beds that provides 24-hour personal care, developmental services, and nursing supervision for persons with developmental disabilities who have continuous needs for skilled nursing care and have been certified by a physician and surgeon as warranting continuous skilled nursing care. The facility shall serve medically fragile persons who have developmental disabilities or demonstrate significant developmental delay that may lead to a developmental disability if not treated. ICF/DD-CN facilities shall be subject to licensure under this chapter upon adoption of licensing regulations in accordance with Section 1275.3. A facility providing continuous skilled nursing services to persons with developmental disabilities pursuant to Section 14132.20 or 14495.10 of the Welfare and Institutions Code shall apply for licensure under this subdivision within 90 days after the regulations become effective, and may continue to operate pursuant to those sections until its licensure application is either approved or denied. SEC. 2. Article 7.2 (commencing with Section 1323.5) is added to Chapter 2 of Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code, to read: Article 7.2. Small House Skilled Nursing Facilities 1323.5. (a) For purposes of this article, the following definitions apply: (1) "Home" means an apartment, home, or other similar unit that serves 10 or fewer residents. (2) "Small house skilled nursing facility (SHSNF)" or "facility" means a skilled nursing facility that is either a stand-alone home or that consists of more than one home, licensed pursuant to this article, for the purposes of providing skilled nursing care in a homelike, noninstitutional setting. (3) "Versatile worker" means a certified nursing assistant who provides personal care, socialization, meal preparation services, and housekeeping services. (b) Commencing January 1, 2014, a facility may be licensed by the department pursuant to this article if the facility meets all of the following requirements: (1) The facility shall be certified to participate as a provider of care either as a skilled nursing facility in the federal Medicare Program under Title XVIII of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1395 et seq.) or as a nursing facility in the federal Medicaid Program under Title XIX of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396 et seq.), or as both. (2) The facility shall comply with all state laws and regulations that govern skilled nursing facilities, exceptto the extent that those laws and regulations are inconsistent with the provisions of this article. The provisions of this article shall supersede any conflicting state law or regulation.as provided in this paragraph. If regulations are in conflict with any provision of this article, the department or the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development may waive one or more of these regulations in order to permit these facilities to implement the provision and meet licensure requirements, if the department or the office determines that doing so will not jeopardize the health and safety of a facility's residents. In making this determination, the department or office shall consider whether the practice contained in the provision has been demonstrated safely in other states, and shall also consider peer-reviewed research. (3) To the extent permitted under federal law, the facility shall provide meals cooked on the premises of each home, and not prepared in a central kitchen and transported to the home. (4) To the extent permitted under federal law, the facility shall utilize versatile workers for purposes of resident care. (5) The facility shall meet all federal and state direct care staffing requirements for skilled nursing facilities, or no less than four hours per resident per day, whichever is greater. All direct care staff shall be onsite, awake, and available within each home at all times. (6) The facility shall provide for consistent staff assignments and self-directed work teams of direct care staff supervised by a leadership team member who is not acting as a nurse or nursing supervisor in the home. (7) (A) The facility shall provide training for all staff involved in the operation of the home for not less than 120 hours for each versatile worker and not less than 60 hours for each leadership and clinical team member, to be completed prior to initial operation of the home, concerning the philosophy, operations, and skills required to implement and maintain self-directed care, self-managed work teams, a noninstitutional approach to long-term care, safety and emergency skills, food handling and safety, and other elements necessary for the successful operation of the home. (B) Replacement staff shall undergo the training described in subparagraph (A) within six weeks of commencing employment with the facility. (C) Any staff members who are employed on a short-term, temporary basis due to permanent staff illness or unexpected absence are exempt from the training requirements specified in subparagraph (A). (8) (A) To the extent permitted under federal law, the facility shall ensure that the percentage of residents in each facility who are short-stay rehabilitation residents does not exceed 20 percent at any time, except that a long-term resident returning to a facility after a hospital stay who is receiving rehabilitation services for which payment is made under the Medicare Program under Title XVIII of the federal Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1395 et seq.), shall not be counted toward this limitation. (B) Subparagraph (A) does not apply to a facility that is licensed pursuant to this article as a facility that solely provides rehabilitation services. (9) To the extent permitted under federal law, each home shall consist of a homelike, rather than institutional, environment, including the following characteristics: (A) The home shall be accessible to disabled persons, and shall be designed as a house or apartment that is similar to housing available within the surrounding community, that includes shared areas that would only be commonly shared in a private home or apartment. (B) The home shall not, to the extent practicable, contain institutional features. These include, but are not limited to, nursing stations, medication carts, room numbers, and wall-mounted licenses or certificates that could appropriately be accessed through other means. (C) The home shall include private, single-occupancy bedrooms that are shared only at the request of a resident to accommodate a spouse, partner, family member, or friend, and that contain a full private and accessible bathroom. (D) The home shall contain a living area where residents and staff may socialize, dine, and prepare food together that provides, at a minimum, a living room seating area, a dining area large enough to accommodate all residents and at least two staff members, and a full kitchen that may be utilized by residents. (E) The home shall contain ample natural light with window areas, not including skylights, being a minimum of 10 percent of the area of each room. (F) The home shall have built-in safety features to allow all areas of the facility to be accessible to residents during the majority of the day and night. (G) The home shall provide access to secured outdoor space. (c) Within two months of receipt of a license application, the department shall notify the applicant of any information necessary to process the application. The department shall review each application and render a decision within six months of receipt of the application. (d)Using resources available as of January 1, 2013, theThe department and the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development shall consult withNCB Capital Impactproviders, employee organizations, consumer advocates, and other interested stakeholders, including groups with demonstrated experience in small house skilled nursing facility operations, on the physical, operational, and other aspects of small house skilled nursing facilities. (e) The department shall adopt regulations to implement this section. SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution.