Respite Care Service 525-05-30-55
(Revised 1/1/15 ML #3428)
View Archives
Purpose
Respite care is care to an eligible
individual for a specified period of time for the purpose of providing
temporary relief to the individual's primary (live-in) caregiver from
the stresses and demands associated with constant care or emergencies.
This care
is provided when there is a need for a specially trained caregiver. Respite
care may be provided in the client's home, or outside the client's home
in either a Respite Care Providers home or an enrolled Qualified Service
Provider of Institutional Respite Care.
Service
Eligibility, Criteria for
The individual receiving respite care service will meet the following
criteria:
- Must be eligible for Medicaid
Waiver for Home and Community Services, SPED, or ExSPED.
- The individual has a full
time (live-in) primary caregiver OR the individual is a child under 22
years of age who is attending school AND the primary caregiver is responsible
for providing full time care when the individual is not in school.
- The relief is not for the
primary caregiver's employment or enrollment/attendance of an educational
program.
- Children three (3) months
of age and under would be eligible only for SPED Respite Care for apnea
monitoring. See
Limits section for infants over three months of age.
- Clients enrolled in a Hospice
program are not eligible for institutional Respite Care but would be eligible
for in-home intermittent Respite Care.
- For a client whose full-time
primary caregiver does not live with him/her but provides frequent on-site
visits throughout the day which is essential to allow the client to live
independently, contact the HCBS Program Administrator for prior approval
for Respite Care.
- The client needs a qualified
caregiver or it would be inappropriate to use an unqualified caregiver
in the absence of the primary caregiver.
- If laundry and/or housekeeping
are the only service need, Respite Care authorization is unallowable.
- The primary caregivers
need for relief is intermittent or occasional.
- If the prospective respite
care provider lives with the client, contact the HCBS Program Administrator
for prior approval.
- A client who is a resident of an Adult Family Foster Care home may choose their respite provider and is not required to use a relative of the Adult Family Foster Care provider for respite.
Information
Provided to the Respite Care QSP:
Case Management documentation should verify that the consumer or legally
responsible party are responsible to inform the Respite Care provider
of the following:
- The Respite Care QSP shall
be informed about the client's daily routine. This may include strengths
and weaknesses of the client, what the client enjoys doing, unique instructions
for specific activities, or special assistance requirements.
- The primary caregiver will
explain in writing situation(s) which may result in an emergency. The
written information should clarify what might happen, the appropriate
response, and who the Respite Care QSP should contact for assistance.
- The primary caregiver shall
identify to the Respite Care QSP the location of a first aid kit in the
home, the location of the fuse box and spare fuses, the fire exit plan
for the home and explain special instructions/restrictions on the operation
of household appliances, kitchen equipment, etc.
- If client specific or global
endorsements are required, the Respite Care QSP must meet the competencies
for these tasks.
Service
Activities, Authorized
The service tasks/activities within the scope of this service chapter
are identified on the Authorization to Provide Service, SFN
1699.
Service
Activities, Not Allowed
Shopping, Community Integration, Social Appropriateness, Transportation
are tasks that cannot be authorized under the Respite Care service.
Limits
- Non-institutional Respite
Care is capped at the daily swing-bed rate regardless of whether an overnight
stay is included. Respite Care providers must bill using the Procedure
Code for a 15-minute unit, not to exceed the swing-bed rate. Only providers
of Institutional Respite Care can bill using the Procedure Code for a
daily rate.
- Twenty-four hour care shall
be allowed in an emergency and cannot exceed the Respite Care cap without
prior approval of the HCBS Program Administrator.
- Respite Care may be provided
for up to three (3) months to an infant requiring apnea monitoring if
other SPED Program eligibility criteria are met, AND an apnea monitor
is recommended by the applicant’s physician.
- An
applicant/client requiring apnea monitoring is eligible upon the HCBS
Program Administration receiving the SFN 1820, Data
for SPED Program Pool Entry/Denial, with the notation the client is on
apnea monitoring. The effective date of service will be the date requested
by the HCBS Case Manager. Coverage under the SPED program can be extended
beyond three (3) months upon written request to the Respite Care Program
Administrator documenting the continued need for Respite Care as a result
of continued need for apnea monitoring.
- The total allowable monthly
maximum for Respite Care must be prorated for all residents in the Adult
Family Foster Care home (regardless of private or public pay). The number
of public and private pay AFFC residents in a home should be evaluated
quarterly during the quarterly contact. Any changes in the amount of respite
should be updated at that time.
- The total allowable maximum
for respite care must be prorated for all clients receiving and living
in the same Family Home Care setting.
- If multiple clients live
in the same home and have the same primary caregiver the respite cap must
be divided by the number of client’s in the home.
- The Department of Human
Services may grant approval to exceed the service cap if the client has
special or unique circumstances; the need for additional services does
not exceed 3 months; and the total need for service does not exceed the
individualized budget amount. Under emergency circumstances, the Department
may grant a one-time extension not to exceed an additional three months.
The case manager must make
participants aware of the service cap.
Institutional
Respite Care
Institutional respite care is care provided in a residential setting
by a provider who is enrolled to provide Institutional Respite Care Services
as a Qualified Service Provider of Institutional Respite Care.
- Placement/Admission:
Institutions providing Respite Care are required to follow licensing rules
for long term care facilities in North Dakota. Respite care provided in
an institutional setting requires the minimum of an overnight stay. Therefore
the facility accepting the client for the provision of Respite Care must
provide the same sleeping accommodations available to residents or patients
of the facility.
The facility cannot exceed their licensed or approved
capacity. The Respite Care client(s) must be included in determining whether
the license or approved bed capacity would be exceeded.
- Staff:
Because
the facility must meet staffing patterns as defined by their licensing
or Medicare-approval authority, the care staff of the facility will not
be required to meet the specific standards of this chapter. The facility
must make available evidence the care staff meet the requirements of their
licensing or Medicare-approval authority upon request of the county social
service board and/or representative of the Department.
- Records:
The facility
shall maintain such client chart or records as is required for residents/patients
of the facility.
Adult
Family Foster Home for Respite
Care
Adult Family Foster Homes that are also enrolled as Respite Care Homes
and are providing services for clients who are not current Adult family
Foster Care recipients bill their established Respite Care unit rate;
the total cost per day cannot exceed the current swing bed rate.
When a client who is a current Adult family foster Care client receives
overnight care in another licensed foster care home, the rate for that
client is the current established foster care rate and the Adult Foster
Care procedure code is used.
Respite
Care in QSP's Home
The form, Respite Home Evaluation, SFN 659, must
be completed to provide evidence that the Respite Care QSP's home meets
the standards for home Respite Care in addition to being an enrolled Qualified
Service provider for Respite Care Service. The county social service board
is responsible for completing the evaluation and forwarding a copy to
the HCBS Program Administrator.
- A minimum of one (1) home
visit to the Respite Care QSP's home shall be made by the County Social
Service Board to complete the form Respite Home Evaluation.
- Upon determining the respite
care QSP's home meets the standards as outlined in SFN 659, a copy of
the completed SFN 659 approving such compliance shall be issued to the
respite care QSP to be effective for no more than two (2) years. The Respite
Care Home QSP must sign an agreement to maintain the standards and keep
a copy of the standards on the premises of the home. The approval shall
apply to only the home at the address evaluated. Should
the Respite Care QSP move, another evaluation is required.
- The County Social Service
Board, shall maintain records of the evaluation, the decision, and the
reason for that decision.