[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 38, Volume 2]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 38CFR51.120]

[Page 832-834]
 
            TITLE 38--PENSIONS, BONUSES, AND VETERANS' RELIEF
 
          CHAPTER I--DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS (CONTINUED)
 
PART 51--PER DIEM FOR NURSING HOME CARE OF VETERANS IN STATE HOMES--Table 
of Contents
 
                          Subpart D--Standards
 
Sec. 51.120  Quality of care.

    Each resident must receive and the facility management must provide 
the necessary care and services to attain or maintain the highest 
practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being, in accordance 
with the comprehensive assessment and plan of care.
    (a) Reporting of Sentinel Events--(1) Definition. A sentinel event 
is an adverse event that results in the loss of life or limb or 
permanent loss of function.
    (2) Examples of sentinel events are as follows:
    (i) Any resident death, paralysis, coma or other major permanent 
loss of function associated with a medication error; or
    (ii) Any suicide of a resident, including suicides following 
elopement (unauthorized departure) from the facility; or
    (iii) Any elopement of a resident from the facility resulting in a 
death or a major permanent loss of function; or
    (iv) Any procedure or clinical intervention, including restraints, 
that result in death or a major permanent loss of function; or
    (v) Assault, homicide or other crime resulting in patient death or 
major permanent loss of function; or
    (vi) A patient fall that results in death or major permanent loss of 
function as a direct result of the injuries sustained in the fall.
    (3) The facility management must report sentinel events to the 
director of VA medical center of jurisdiction within 24 hours of 
identification. The VA medical center of jurisdiction must report 
sentinel events by calling VA Network Director (10N 1-22) and Chief 
Consultant, Geriatrics and Extended Care Strategic Healthcare Group 
(114) within 24 hours of notification.
    (4) The facility management must establish a mechanism to review and 
analyze a sentinel event resulting in a written report no later than 10 
working days following the event. The purpose of the review and analysis 
of a sentinel event is to prevent injuries to residents, visitors, and 
personnel, and to manage those injuries that do occur and to minimize 
the negative consequences to the injured individuals and facility.
    (b) Activities of daily living. Based on the comprehensive 
assessment of a resident, the facility management must ensure that--
    (1) A resident's abilities in activities of daily living do not 
diminish unless circumstances of the individual's clinical condition 
demonstrate that diminution was unavoidable. This includes the 
resident's ability to--
    (i) Bathe, dress, and groom;
    (ii) Transfer and ambulate;
    (iii) Toilet;
    (iv) Eat; and
    (v) Talk or otherwise communicate.
    (2) A resident is given the appropriate treatment and services to 
maintain or improve his or her abilities specified in paragraph (b)(1) 
of this section; and
    (3) A resident who is unable to carry out activities of daily living 
receives the necessary services to maintain good nutrition, hydration, 
grooming, personal and oral hygiene, mobility, and bladder and bowel 
elimination.
    (c) Vision and hearing. To ensure that residents receive proper 
treatment and assistive devices to maintain vision and hearing 
abilities, the facility must, if necessary, assist the resident--
    (1) In making appointments, and
    (2) By arranging for transportation to and from the office of a 
practitioner specializing in the treatment of vision or hearing 
impairment or the office of a professional specializing in the provision 
of vision or hearing assistive devices.
    (d) Pressure sores. Based on the comprehensive assessment of a 
resident, the facility management must ensure that--
    (1) A resident who enters the facility without pressure sores does 
not develop

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pressure sores unless the individual's clinical condition demonstrates 
that they were unavoidable; and
    (2) A resident having pressure sores receives necessary treatment 
and services to promote healing, prevent infection and prevent new sores 
from developing.
    (e) Urinary and Fecal Incontinence. Based on the resident's 
comprehensive assessment, the facility management must ensure that--
    (1) A resident who enters the facility without an indwelling 
catheter is not catheterized unless the resident's clinical condition 
demonstrates that catheterization was necessary;
    (2) A resident who is incontinent of urine receives appropriate 
treatment and services to prevent urinary tract infections and to 
restore as much normal bladder function as possible; and
    (3) A resident who has persistent fecal incontinence receives 
appropriate treatment and services to treat reversible causes and to 
restore as much normal bowel function as possible.
    (f) Range of motion. Based on the comprehensive assessment of a 
resident, the facility management must ensure that--
    (1) A resident who enters the facility without a limited range of 
motion does not experience reduction in range of motion unless the 
resident's clinical condition demonstrates that a reduction in range of 
motion is unavoidable; and
    (2) A resident with a limited range of motion receives appropriate 
treatment and services to increase range of motion and/or to prevent 
further decrease in range of motion.
    (g) Mental and Psychosocial functioning. Based on the comprehensive 
assessment of a resident, the facility management must ensure that a 
resident who displays mental or psychosocial adjustment difficulty, 
receives appropriate treatment and services to correct the assessed 
problem.
    (h) Enteral Feedings. Based on the comprehensive assessment of a 
resident, the facility management must ensure that--
    (1) A resident who has been able to adequately eat or take fluids 
alone or with assistance is not fed by enteral feedings unless the 
resident's clinical condition demonstrates that use of enteral feedings 
was unavoidable; and
    (2) A resident who is fed by enteral feedings receives the 
appropriate treatment and services to prevent aspiration pneumonia, 
diarrhea, vomiting, dehydration, metabolic abnormalities, nasal-
pharyngeal ulcers and other skin breakdowns, and to restore, if 
possible, normal eating skills.
    (i) Accidents. The facility management must ensure that--
    (1) The resident environment remains as free of accident hazards as 
is possible; and
    (2) Each resident receives adequate supervision and assistance 
devices to prevent accidents.
    (j) Nutrition. Based on a resident's comprehensive assessment, the 
facility management must ensure that a resident--
    (1) Maintains acceptable parameters of nutritional status, such as 
body weight and protein levels, unless the resident's clinical condition 
demonstrates that this is not possible; and
    (2) Receives a therapeutic diet when a nutritional deficiency is 
identified.
    (k) Hydration. The facility management must provide each resident 
with sufficient fluid intake to maintain proper hydration and health.
    (l) Special needs. The facility management must ensure that 
residents receive proper treatment and care for the following special 
services:
    (1) Injections;
    (2) Parenteral and enteral fluids;
    (3) Colostomy, ureterostomy, or ileostomy care;
    (4) Tracheostomy care;
    (5) Tracheal suctioning;
    (6) Respiratory care;
    (7) Foot care; and
    (8) Prostheses.
    (m) Unnecessary drugs--(1) General. Each resident's drug regimen 
must be free from unnecessary drugs. An unnecessary drug is any drug 
when used:
    (i) In excessive dose (including duplicate drug therapy); or
    (ii) For excessive duration; or
    (iii) Without adequate monitoring; or
    (iv) Without adequate indications for its use; or
    (v) In the presence of adverse consequences which indicate the dose 
should be reduced or discontinued; or

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    (vi) Any combinations of the reasons above.
    (2) Antipsychotic Drugs. Based on a comprehensive assessment of a 
resident, the facility management must ensure that--
    (i) Residents who have not used antipsychotic drugs are not given 
these drugs unless antipsychotic drug therapy is necessary to treat a 
specific condition as diagnosed and documented in the clinical record; 
and
    (ii) Residents who use antipsychotic drugs receive gradual dose 
reductions, and behavioral interventions, unless clinically 
contraindicated, in an effort to discontinue these drugs.
    (n) Medication Errors. The facility management must ensure that--
    (1) Medication errors are identified and reviewed on a timely basis; 
and
    (2) strategies for preventing medication errors and adverse 
reactions are implemented.

(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 101, 501, 1710, 1741-1743)