[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 42, Volume 3]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 42CFR482.13]

[Page 477-479]
 
                         TITLE 42--PUBLIC HEALTH
 
  CHAPTER IV--CENTERS FOR MEDICARE & MEDICAID SERVICES, DEPARTMENT OF 
                 HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES--(Continued)
 
PART 482--CONDITIONS OF PARTICIPATION FOR HOSPITALS--Table of Contents
 
                        Subpart B--Administration
 
Sec. 482.13  Condition of participation: Patients' rights.

    A hospital must protect and promote each patient's rights.
    (a) Standard: Notice of rights. (1) A hospital must inform each 
patient, or when appropriate, the patient's representative (as allowed 
under State law), of the patient's rights, in advance of furnishing or 
discontinuing patient care whenever possible.
    (2) The hospital must establish a process for prompt resolution of 
patient grievances and must inform each patient whom to contact to file 
a grievance. The hospital's governing body must approve and be 
responsible for the effective operation of the grievance process and 
must review and resolve grievances, unless it delegates the 
responsibility in writing to a grievance committee. The grievance 
process must include a mechanism for timely referral of patient concerns 
regarding quality of care or premature discharge to the appropriate 
Utilization and Quality Control Quality Improvement Organization. At a 
minimum:
    (i) The hospital must establish a clearly explained procedure for 
the submission of a patient's written or verbal grievance to the 
hospital.
    (ii) The grievance process must specify time frames for review of 
the grievance and the provision of a response.
    (iii) In its resolution of the grievance, the hospital must provide 
the patient with written notice of its decision that contains the name 
of the hospital contact person, the steps taken on behalf of the patient 
to investigate the

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grievance, the results of the grievance process, and the date of 
completion.
    (b) Standard: Exercise of rights. (1) The patient has the right to 
participate in the development and implementation of his or her plan of 
care.
    (2) The patient or his or her representative (as allowed under State 
law) has the right to make informed decisions regarding his or her care. 
The patient's rights include being informed of his or her health status, 
being involved in care planning and treatment, and being able to request 
or refuse treatment. This right must not be construed as a mechanism to 
demand the provision of treatment or services deemed medically 
unnecessary or inappropriate.
    (3) The patient has the right to formulate advance directives and to 
have hospital staff and practitioners who provide care in the hospital 
comply with these directives, in accordance with Sec. 489.100 of this 
part (Definition), Sec. 489.102 of this part (Requirements for 
providers), and Sec. 489.104 of this part (Effective dates).
    (4) The patient has the right to have a family member or 
representative of his or her choice and his or her own physician 
notified promptly of his or her admission to the hospital.
    (c) Standard: Privacy and safety. (1) The patient has the right to 
personal privacy.
    (2) The patient has the right to receive care in a safe setting.
    (3) The patient has the right to be free from all forms of abuse or 
harassment.
    (d) Standard: Confidentiality of patient records. (1) The patient 
has the right to the confidentiality of his or her clinical records.
    (2) The patient has the right to access information contained in his 
or her clinical records within a reasonable time frame. The hospital 
must not frustrate the legitimate efforts of individuals to gain access 
to their own medical records and must actively seek to meet these 
requests as quickly as its recordkeeping system permits.
    (e) Standard: Restraint for acute medical and surgical care. (1) The 
patient has the right to be free from restraints of any form that are 
not medically necessary or are used as a means of coercion, discipline, 
convenience, or retaliation by staff. The term ``restraint'' includes 
either a physical restraint or a drug that is being used as a restraint. 
A physical restraint is any manual method or physical or mechanical 
device, material, or equipment attached or adjacent to the patient's 
body that he or she cannot easily remove that restricts freedom of 
movement or normal access to one's body. A drug used as a restraint is a 
medication used to control behavior or to restrict the patient's freedom 
of movement and is not a standard treatment for the patient's medical or 
psychiatric condition.
    (2) A restraint can only be used if needed to improve the patient's 
well-being and less restrictive interventions have been determined to be 
ineffective.
    (3) The use of a restraint must be--
    (i) Selected only when other less restrictive measures have been 
found to be ineffective to protect the patient or others from harm;
    (ii) In accordance with the order of a physician or other licensed 
independent practitioner permitted by the State and hospital to order a 
restraint. This order must--
    (A) Never be written as a standing or on an as needed basis (that 
is, PRN); and
    (B) Be followed by consultation with the patient's treating 
physician, as soon as possible, if the restraint is not ordered by the 
patient's treating physician;
    (iii) In accordance with a written modification to the patient's 
plan of care;
    (iv) Implemented in the least restrictive manner possible;
    (v) In accordance with safe and appropriate restraining techniques; 
and
    (vi) Ended at the earliest possible time.
    (4) The condition of the restrained patient must be continually 
assessed, monitored, and reevaluated.
    (5) All staff who have direct patient contact must have ongoing 
education and training in the proper and safe use of restraints.
    (f) Standard: Seclusion and restraint for behavior management. (1) 
The patient has the right to be free from seclusion and restraints, of 
any form, imposed as

[[Page 479]]

a means of coercion, discipline, convenience, or retaliation by staff. 
The term ``restraint'' includes either a physical restraint or a drug 
that is being used as a restraint. A physical restraint is any manual 
method or physical or mechanical device, material, or equipment attached 
or adjacent to the patient's body that he or she cannot easily remove 
that restricts freedom of movement or normal access to one's body. A 
drug used as a restraint is a medication used to control behavior or to 
restrict the patient's freedom of movement and is not a standard 
treatment for the patient's medical or psychiatric condition. Seclusion 
is the involuntary confinement of a person in a room or an area where 
the person is physically prevented from leaving.
    (2) Seclusion or a restraint can only be used in emergency 
situations if needed to ensure the patient's physical safety and less 
restrictive interventions have been determined to be ineffective.
    (3) The use of a restraint or seclusion must be--
    (i) Selected only when less restrictive measures have been found to 
be ineffective to protect the patient or others from harm;
    (ii) In accordance with the order of a physician or other licensed 
independent practitioner permitted by the State and hospital to order 
seclusion or restraint. The following requirements will be superseded by 
existing State laws that are more restrictive:
    (A) Orders for the use of seclusion or a restraint must never be 
written as a standing order or on an as needed basis (that is, PRN).
    (B) The treating physician must be consulted as soon as possible, if 
the restraint or seclusion is not ordered by the patient's treating 
physician.
    (C) A physician or other licensed independent practitioner must see 
and evaluate the need for restraint or seclusion within 1 hour after the 
initiation of this intervention.
    (D) Each written order for a physical restraint or seclusion is 
limited to 4 hours for adults; 2 hours for children and adolescents ages 
9 to 17; or 1 hour for patients under 9. The original order may only be 
renewed in accordance with these limits for up to a total of 24 hours. 
After the original order expires, a physician or licensed independent 
practitioner (if allowed under State law) must see and assess the 
patient before issuing a new order.
    (iii) In accordance with a written modification to the patient's 
plan of care;
    (iv) Implemented in the least restrictive manner possible;
    (v) In accordance with safe appropriate restraining techniques; and
    (vi) Ended at the earliest possible time.
    (4) A restraint and seclusion may not be used simultaneously unless 
the patient is--
    (i) Continually monitored face-to-face by an assigned staff member; 
or
    (ii) Continually monitored by staff using both video and audio 
equipment. This monitoring must be in close proximity the patient.
    (5) The condition of the patient who is in a restraint or in 
seclusion must continually be assessed, monitored, and reevaluated.
    (6) All staff who have direct patient contact must have ongoing 
education and training in the proper and safe use of seclusion and 
restraint application and techniques and alternative methods for 
handling behavior, symptoms, and situations that traditionally have been 
treated through the use of restraints or seclusion.
    (7) The hospital must report to CMS any death that occurs while a 
patient is restrained or in seclusion, or where it is reasonable to 
assume that a patient's death is a result of restraint or seclusion.

[64 FR 36088, July 2, 1999]