[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: 38CFR51.210]

[Page 838-843]
 
            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. 51.210  Administration.

    A facility must be administered in a manner that enables it to use 
its resources effectively and efficiently to attain or maintain the 
highest practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well being of 
each resident.
    (a) Governing body. (1) The State must have a governing body, or 
designated person functioning as a governing body, that is legally 
responsible for establishing and implementing policies regarding the 
management and operation of the facility; and
    (2) The governing body or State official with oversight for the 
facility appoints the administrator who is--
    (i) Licensed by the State where licensing is required; and
    (ii) Responsible for operation and management of the facility.
    (b) Disclosure of State agency and individual responsible for 
oversight of facility. The State must give written notice to

[[Page 839]]

the Chief Consultant, Geriatrics and Extended Care Strategic Healthcare 
Group (114), VA Headquarters, 810 Vermont Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 
20420, at the time of the change, if any of the following change:
    (1) The State agency and individual responsible for oversight of a 
State home facility;
    (2) The State home administrator; and
    (3) The State employee responsible for oversight of the State home 
facility if a contractor operates the State home.
    (c) Required Information. The facility management must submit the 
following to the director of the VA medical center of jurisdiction as 
part of the application for recognition and thereafter as often as 
necessary to be current or as specified:
    (1) The copy of legal and administrative action establishing the 
State-operated facility (e.g., State laws);
    (2) Site plan of facility and surroundings;
    (3) Legal title, lease, or other document establishing right to 
occupy facility;
    (4) Organizational charts and the operational plan of the facility;
    (5) The number of the staff by category indicating full-time, part-
time and minority designation (annual at time of survey);
    (6) The number of nursing home patients who are veterans and non-
veterans, the number of veterans who are minorities and the number of 
non-veterans who are minorities (annual at time of survey);
    (7) Annual State Fire Marshall's report;
    (8) Annual certification from the responsible State Agency showing 
compliance with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (Public 
Law 93-112) (VA Form 10-0143A set forth at Sec. 58.14 of this chapter);
    (9) Annual certification for Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988 (VA 
Form 10-0143 set forth at Sec. 58.15 of this chapter);
    (10) Annual certification regarding lobbying in compliance with 
Public Law 101-121 (VA Form 10-0144 set forth at Sec. 58.16 of this 
chapter); and
    (11) Annual certification of compliance with Title VI of the Civil 
Rights Act of 1964 as incorporated in Title 38 CFR 18.1-18.3 (VA Form 
10-0144A located at Sec. 58.17 of this chapter).
    (d) Percentage of Veterans. The percent of the facility residents 
eligible for VA nursing home care must be at least 75 percent veterans 
except that the veteran percentage need only be more than 50 percent if 
the facility was constructed or renovated solely with State funds. All 
non-veteran residents must be spouses of veterans or parents all of 
whose children died while serving in the armed forces of the United 
States.
    (e) Management Contract Facility. If a facility is operated by an 
entity contracting with the State, the State must assign a State 
employee to monitor the operations of the facility on a full-time onsite 
basis.
    (f) Licensure. The facility and facility management must comply with 
applicable State and local licensure laws.
    (g) Staff qualifications. (1) The facility management must employ on 
a full-time, part-time or consultant basis those professionals necessary 
to carry out the provisions of these requirements.
    (2) Professional staff must be licensed, certified, or registered in 
accordance with applicable State laws.
    (h) Use of outside resources. (1) If the facility does not employ a 
qualified professional person to furnish a specific service to be 
provided by the facility, the facility management must have that service 
furnished to residents by a person or agency outside the facility under 
a written agreement described in paragraph (h)(2) of this section.
    (2) Agreements pertaining to services furnished by outside resources 
must specify in writing that the facility management assumes 
responsibility for--
    (i) Obtaining services that meet professional standards and 
principles that apply to professionals providing services in such a 
facility; and
    (ii) The timeliness of the services.
    (i) Medical director. (1) The facility management must designate a 
primary care physician to serve as medical director.

[[Page 840]]

    (2) The medical director is responsible for--
    (i) Participating in establishing policies, procedures, and 
guidelines to ensure adequate, comprehensive services;
    (ii) Directing and coordinating medical care in the facility;
    (iii) Helping to arrange for continuous physician coverage to handle 
medical emergencies;
    (iv) Reviewing the credentialing and privileging process;
    (v) Participating in managing the environment by reviewing and 
evaluating incident reports or summaries of incident reports, 
identifying hazards to health and safety, and making recommendations to 
the administrator; and
    (vi) Monitoring employees' health status and advising the 
administrator on employee-health policies.
    (j) Credentialing and Privileging. Credentialing is the process of 
obtaining, verifying, and assessing the qualifications of a health care 
practitioner, which may include physicians, podiatrists, dentists, 
psychologists, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, licensed 
nurses to provide patient care services in or for a health care 
organization. Privileging is the process whereby a specific scope and 
content of patient care services are authorized for a health care 
practitioner by the facility management, based on evaluation of the 
individual's credentials and performance.
    (1) The facility management must uniformly apply credentialing 
criteria to licensed practitioners applying to provide resident care or 
treatment under the facility's care.
    (2) The facility management must verify and uniformly apply the 
following core criteria: current licensure; current certification, if 
applicable, relevant education, training, and experience; current 
competence; and a statement that the individual is able to perform the 
services he or she is applying to provide.
    (3) The facility management must decide whether to authorize the 
independent practitioner to provide resident care or treatment, and each 
credentials file must indicate that these criteria are uniformly and 
individually applied.
    (4) The facility management must maintain documentation of current 
credentials for each licensed independent practitioner practicing within 
the facility.
    (5) When reappointing a licensed independent practitioner, the 
facility management must review the individual's record of experience.
    (6) The facility management systematically must assess whether 
individuals with clinical privileges act within the scope of privileges 
granted.
    (k) Required training of nursing aides. (1) Nurse aide means any 
individual providing nursing or nursing-related services to residents in 
a facility who is not a licensed health professional, a registered 
dietitian, or a volunteer who provide such services without pay.
    (2) The facility management must not use any individual working in 
the facility as a nurse aide whether permanent or not unless:
    (i) That individual is competent to provide nursing and nursing 
related services; and
    (ii) That individual has completed a training and competency 
evaluation program, or a competency evaluation program approved by the 
State.
    (3) Registry verification. Before allowing an individual to serve as 
a nurse aide, facility management must receive registry verification 
that the individual has met competency evaluation requirements unless 
the individual can prove that he or she has recently successfully 
completed a training and competency evaluation program or competency 
evaluation program approved by the State and has not yet been included 
in the registry. Facilities must follow up to ensure that such an 
individual actually becomes registered.
    (4) Multi-State registry verification. Before allowing an individual 
to serve as a nurse aide, facility management must seek information from 
every State registry established under HHS regulations at 42 CFR 483.156 
which the facility believes will include information on the individual.
    (5) Required retraining. If, since an individual's most recent 
completion of a training and competency evaluation program, there has 
been a continuous period of 24 consecutive months during

[[Page 841]]

none of which the individual provided nursing or nursing-related 
services for monetary compensation, the individual must complete a new 
training and competency evaluation program or a new competency 
evaluation program.
    (6) Regular in-service education. The facility management must 
complete a performance review of every nurse aide at least once every 12 
months, and must provide regular in-service education based on the 
outcome of these reviews. The in-service training must--
    (i) Be sufficient to ensure the continuing competence of nurse 
aides, but must be no less than 12 hours per year;
    (ii) Address areas of weakness as determined in nurse aides' 
performance reviews and may address the special needs of residents as 
determined by the facility staff; and
    (iii) For nurse aides providing services to individuals with 
cognitive impairments, also address the care of the cognitively 
impaired.
    (l) Proficiency of Nurse aides. The facility management must ensure 
that nurse aides are able to demonstrate competency in skills and 
techniques necessary to care for residents' needs, as identified through 
resident assessments, and described in the plan of care.
    (m) Level B Requirement Laboratory services. (1) The facility 
management must provide or obtain laboratory services to meet the needs 
of its residents. The facility is responsible for the quality and 
timeliness of the services.
    (i) If the facility provides its own laboratory services, the 
services must meet all applicable certification standards, statutes, and 
regulations for laboratory services.
    (ii) If the facility provides blood bank and transfusion services, 
it must meet all applicable certification standards, statutes, and 
regulations.
    (iii) If the laboratory chooses to refer specimens for testing to 
another laboratory, the referral laboratory must be certified in the 
appropriate specialities and subspecialties of services and meet 
certification standards, statutes, and regulations.
    (iv) The laboratory performing the testing must have a current, 
valid CLIA number (Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988). 
The facility management must provide VA surveyors with the CLIA number 
and a copy of the results of the last CLIA inspection.
    (v) Such services must be available to the resident seven days a 
week, 24 hours a day.
    (2) The facility management must--
    (i) Provide or obtain laboratory services only when ordered by the 
primary physician;
    (ii) Promptly notify the primary physician of the findings;
    (iii) Assist the resident in making transportation arrangements to 
and from the source of service, if the resident needs assistance; and
    (iv) File in the resident's clinical record laboratory reports that 
are dated and contain the name and address of the testing laboratory.
    (n) Radiology and other diagnostic services. (1) The facility 
management must provide or obtain radiology and other diagnostic 
services to meet the needs of its residents. The facility is responsible 
for the quality and timeliness of the services.
    (i) If the facility provides its own diagnostic services, the 
services must meet all applicable certification standards, statutes, and 
regulations.
    (ii) If the facility does not provide its own diagnostic services, 
it must have an agreement to obtain these services. The services must 
meet all applicable certification standards, statutes, and regulations.
    (iii) Radiologic and other diagnostic services must be available 24 
hours a day, seven days a week.
    (2) The facility must--
    (i) Provide or obtain radiology and other diagnostic services when 
ordered by the primary physician;
    (ii) Promptly notify the primary physician of the findings;
    (iii) Assist the resident in making transportation arrangements to 
and from the source of service, if the resident needs assistance; and
    (iv) File in the resident's clinical record signed and dated reports 
of x-ray and other diagnostic services.
    (o) Clinical records. (1) The facility management must maintain 
clinical records on each resident in accordance with accepted 
professional standards and practices that are--

[[Page 842]]

    (i) Complete;
    (ii) Accurately documented;
    (iii) Readily accessible; and
    (iv) Systematically organized.
    (2) Clinical records must be retained for--
    (i) The period of time required by State law; or
    (ii) Five years from the date of discharge when there is no 
requirement in State law.
    (3) The facility management must safeguard clinical record 
information against loss, destruction, or unauthorized use;
    (4) The facility management must keep confidential all information 
contained in the resident's records, regardless of the form or storage 
method of the records, except when release is required by--
    (i) Transfer to another health care institution;
    (ii) Law;
    (iii) Third party payment contract;
    (iv) The resident or;
    (v) The resident's authorized agent or representative.
    (5) The clinical record must contain--
    (i) Sufficient information to identify the resident;
    (ii) A record of the resident's assessments;
    (iii) The plan of care and services provided;
    (iv) The results of any pre-admission screening conducted by the 
State; and
    (v) Progress notes.
    (p) Quality assessment and assurance. (1) Facility management must 
maintain a quality assessment and assurance committee consisting of--
    (i) The director of nursing services;
    (ii) A primary physician designated by the facility; and
    (iii) At least 3 other members of the facility's staff.
    (2) The quality assessment and assurance committee--
    (i) Meets at least quarterly to identify issues with respect to 
which quality assessment and assurance activities are necessary; and
    (ii) Develops and implements appropriate plans of action to correct 
identified quality deficiencies; and
    (3) Identified quality deficiencies are corrected within an 
established time period.
    (4) The VA Under Secretary for Health may not require disclosure of 
the records of such committee unless such disclosure is related to the 
compliance with requirements of this section.
    (q) Disaster and emergency preparedness. (1) The facility management 
must have detailed written plans and procedures to meet all potential 
emergencies and disasters, such as fire, severe weather, and missing 
residents.
    (2) The facility management must train all employees in emergency 
procedures when they begin to work in the facility, periodically review 
the procedures with existing staff, and carry out unannounced staff 
drills using those procedures.
    (r) Transfer agreement. (1) The facility management must have in 
effect a written transfer agreement with one or more hospitals that 
reasonably assures that--
    (i) Residents will be transferred from the nursing home to the 
hospital, and ensured of timely admission to the hospital when transfer 
is medically appropriate as determined by the primary physician; and
    (ii) Medical and other information needed for care and treatment of 
residents, and, when the transferring facility deems it appropriate, for 
determining whether such residents can be adequately cared for in a less 
expensive setting than either the nursing home or the hospital, will be 
exchanged between the institutions.
    (2) The facility is considered to have a transfer agreement in 
effect if the facility has an agreement with a hospital sufficiently 
close to the facility to make transfer feasible.
    (s) Compliance with Federal, State, and local laws and professional 
standards. The facility management must operate and provide services in 
compliance with all applicable Federal, State, and local laws, 
regulations, and codes, and with accepted professional standards and 
principles that apply to professionals providing services in such a 
facility. This includes the Single Audit Act of 1984 (Title 31, Section 
7501 et seq.) and the Cash Management Improvement Acts of 1990 and 1992 
(Public Laws 101-453 and 102-589, see 31 USC 3335, 3718, 3720A, 6501, 
6503)

[[Page 843]]

    (t) Relationship to other Federal regulations. In addition to 
compliance with the regulations set forth in this subpart, facilities 
are obliged to meet the applicable provisions of other Federal laws and 
regulations, including but not limited to those pertaining to 
nondiscrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, 
handicap, or age (38 CFR part 18); protection of human subjects of 
research (45 CFR part 46), section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 
1993, Public Law 93-112; Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988, 38 CFR part 
44, section 44.100 through 44.420; section 319 of Public Law 101-121; 
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 38 CFR 18.1-18.3. Although 
these regulations are not in themselves considered requirements under 
this part, their violation may result in the termination or suspension 
of, or the refusal to grant or continue payment with Federal funds.
    (u) Intermingling. A building housing a facility recognized as a 
State home for providing nursing home care may only provide nursing home 
care in the areas of the building recognized as a State home for 
providing nursing home care.
    (v) VA Management of State Veterans Homes. Except as specifically 
provided by statute or regulations, VA employees have no authority 
regarding the management or control of State homes providing nursing 
home care.

(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 101, 501, 1710, 1741-1743, 8135)