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Date(s):
July 08, 2009 Time:
12:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. CENTRAL TIME
View PDF Associated With This Event
Overview: Restraint and Seclusion is a hot spot with both CMS and the Joint Commission and a common area where hospitals are cited for being out of compliance. The restraint policy is one of the hardest to write and understand in healthcare today. CMS has issued interpretive guidelines on restraint and seclusions for hospitals on April 11, 2008 and October 17, 2008. These are extensive covering 50 pages. This program will simplify and take the mystery out of the restraint and seclusion interpretive guidelines. It will provide a crosswalk to the July 1, 2009 Joint Commission standards. Avoid the restraint nightmare now and let us take the mystery out of these confusing regulations by attending this program.
Every hospital that accepts Medicare patients will have to comply with the interpretive guidelines even if the hospital is Joint Commission accredited. Hospitals will need to revise their policies and procedures to comply with these and will need to provide restraint training to staff. There is also a requirement that physicians and anyone who writes an order for restraints will have to be educated on the hospitals policy. The new guidelines explain the training requirements for the RN doing the one hour face to face visits for patients who are violent and or self destructive. There are basically 21 issues covered by the new CMS interpretive guidelines. The Joint Commission standards on restraint and seclusion will be reference also be covered since these must be included in the hospitals policy and procedure. It is important to recognize which is the most stringent.
Objectives:
Define the changes to the CMS restraint guidelines including that the requirement that all deaths that occur while the patient is in restraints or within 24 hours after must be reported to CMS.
Recall that CMS requires that all physicians and others who order restraints must be educated on the hospital policy,
Describe the new CMS restraint education requirements for staff including the hospital requirement for first aid training and what training the RN who does the one hour face to face visit must have.
Target Audience: Compliance officers, CNOs, chiefs of medical staff, COOs, nurse educators, medical staff coordinators, RMs, patient safety officers, senior leadership, hospital legal counsel, PI directors, Joint Commission coordinators, nurse managers, quality directors, chief medical officers and others responsible for compliance with hospital regulations. Persons responsible for rewriting the hospital policies and medical staff bylaws should also attend.
Topics:
Right to be free from restraint
Providing copy of right to patients
Restraint protocols
Medical restraints
Behavioral health restraints
Violent and self destructive behavior
New definition of restraint and seclusion
Manual holds of patients
Leadership responsibilities
Drugs used as a restraint
Standard treatment
Learning from each other
Restraints does not include
Side rails, forensic restraints, freedom splints, immobilizers
Assessment
Need order ASAP
Order from LIP and notification of attending physician ASAP
Documentation requirements
Least restrictive requirements
Alternatives
RNs and One hour face to face assessment
Training for RN doing one hour face to face assessment
New training requirements
New death reporting requirements
Ending at earliest time
Revisions to the plan of care
PI requirements
Time limited orders
Renewing orders
Staff education
First aid training required
Stricter state laws
Monitoring of patient in R/S
Joint Commission Hospital Restraint standards and differences from CMS
Faculty: Sue Dill Calloway is a nurse attorney and is Director of Hospital Patient Safety for OHIC Insurance Company and The Doctors Company. She has done many educational programs for nurses, physicians, and other health care providers. She has authored over 100 books and numerous articles. She is a frequent speaker and is well known across the country in the area of healthcare law, risk management, and patient safety.
Registration: Educate Your Entire Staff Quickly and Economically!
Register for this program to educate your entire staff in a short period of time without incurring multiple registration fees or travel expenses. The registration is $195 and includes one toll-free telephone connection and one free internet connection to the presentation. You can gather numerous staff members in one room to attend for one economical price. Prior to the program, you will receive a detailed slide presentation and handout materials which you can distribute to all participants, along with the log-in information.
Click here to register
For More Information:
Jon Borton
Phone: (402) 742-8147
E-mail: jborton@nhanet.org
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