Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 290-2-7-.09

Current through Rules and Regulations filed through October 29, 2024
Rule 290-2-7-.09 - Behavior and Management and Emergency Safety Interventions
(1) Behavior Management.
(a) The Outdoor Child Caring Program shall develop and implement policies and procedures on behavior management. Such policies and procedures shall set forth the types of children served in accordance with its program purpose, the anticipated behavioral problems of the children, and acceptable methods of managing such problems.
(b) Such Behavior management policies and procedures shall incorporate the following minimum requirements:
1. Behavior management principles and techniques shall be used in accordance with the individual service plan and written policies and procedures governing service expectations, service plan goals, safety, security, and these rules and regulations.
2. Behavior management shall be limited to the least restrictive appropriate method, as described in the camper's service plan and in accordance with the prohibitions as specified in these rules and regulations.
(c) The following forms of behavior management shall not be used:
1. Assignment of excessive or unreasonable work tasks;
2. Denial of meals and hydration;
3. Denial of sleep;
4. Denial of shelter, clothing, or essential personal needs;
5. Denial of essential program services;
6. Verbal abuse, ridicule, or humiliation;
7. Restraint, manual holds, and seclusion used as a means of coercion, discipline, convenience, or retaliation;
8. Denial of communication and visits unless restricted in accordance with Rule .08(3);
9. Corporal punishment; and
10. Seclusion not used appropriately as an emergency safety intervention.
(d) Campers shall not be permitted to participate in the behavior management of other campers or to discipline other campers.
(e) Outdoor Child Caring Programs shall submit to the Department electronically or by facsimile a report within 24 hours whenever an unusual incident occurs regarding behavior management, including any injury requiring medical treatment beyond first aid that is received by a camper as a result of any behavior management.
(f) All forms of behavior management used by direct care staff shall also be documented in case records in order to ensure that such records reflect behavior management problems.
(2) Emergency Safety Interventions.
(a) Emergency safety interventions may be used only by staff trained in the proper use of such interventions when a camper exhibits a dangerous behavior reasonably expected to lead to immediate physical harm to the camper or others and less restrictive means of dealing with the injurious behavior have not proven successful or may subject the camper or others to greater risk of injury.
(b) Emergency safety interventions shall not include the use of any restraint or manual hold that would potentially impair the camper's ability to breathe or has been determined to be inappropriate for use on a particular camper due to a documented medical or psychological condition.
(c) The institution shall have written policies and procedures for the use of emergency safety interventions, a copy of which shall be provided to and discussed with each camper and the camper's parents and/or legal guardians prior to or at the time of admission. Emergency safety interventions policies and procedures shall include:
1. Provisions for the documentation of an assessment at admission and at each annual exam by the camper's physician, a physician's assistant, or a registered nurse with advanced training working under the direction of a physician, or a public health department that states there are no medical issues that would be incompatible with the appropriate use of emergency safety interventions on that camper. Such assessment and documentation must be re-evaluated following any significant change in the camper's medical condition; and
2. Provisions for the documentation of each use of an emergency safety intervention including:
(i) Date and description of the precipitating incident;
(ii) Description of the de-escalation techniques used prior to the emergency safety intervention, if applicable;
(iii) Environmental considerations;
(iv) Names of staff participating in the emergency safety intervention;
(v) Any witnesses to the precipitating incident and subsequent intervention;
(vi) Exact emergency safety intervention used;
(vii) Documentation of the 15 minute interval visual monitoring of a child in seclusion;
(viii) Beginning and ending time of the intervention;
(ix) Outcome of the intervention;
(x) Detailed description of any injury arising from the incident or intervention; and
(xi) Summary of any medical care provided.
3. Provisions for prohibiting manual hold use by any employee not trained in prevention and use of emergency safety interventions.
(d) Emergency safety interventions or the use of physical restraint may be used to prevent runaways only when the child presents an imminent threat of physical harm to self or others, or as specified in the individual service and room, board and watchful oversight plan.
(e) Facility staff shall be aware of each camper's medical and psychological conditions, as evidenced by written acknowledgement of such awareness, to ensure that the emergency safety intervention that is utilized does not pose any undue danger to the physical or mental health of the camper.
(f) Campers shall not be allowed to participate in the emergency safety intervention of another camper.
(g) Immediately following the conclusion of the emergency safety intervention and hourly thereafter for a period of at least four hours where the camper is with a staff member, the camper's behavior will be assessed, monitored, and documented to ensure that the camper does not appear to be exhibiting symptoms that would be associated with an injury. Authority O.C.G.A. Secs. 49-5-8 and 49-5-12.
(h) At a minimum, the emergency safety intervention program that is utilized shall include the following:
1. Techniques for de-escalating problem behavior including camper and staff debriefings;
2. Appropriate use of emergency safety interventions;
3. Recognizing aggressive behavior that may be related to a medical condition;
4. Awareness of physiological impact of a restraint on the camper;
5. Recognizing signs and symptoms of positional and compression asphyxia and restraint associated cardiac arrest;
6. Instructions as to how to monitor the breathing, verbal responsiveness, and motor control of a camper who is the subject of an emergency safety intervention;
7. Appropriate self-protection techniques;
8. Policies and procedures relating to using manual holds, including the prohibition of any technique that would potentially impair a camper's ability to breathe;
9. Camp policies and reporting requirements;
10. Alternatives to restraint;
11. Avoiding power struggles;
12. Escape and evasion techniques;
13. Time limits for the use of restraint and seclusion;
14. Process for obtaining approval for continual restraints and seclusion;
15. Procedures to address problematic restraints;
16. Documentation;
17. Investigation of injuries and complaints;
18. Monitoring physical signs of distress and obtaining medical assistance; and
19. Legal issues.
(i) Emergency safety intervention training shall be in addition to the annual training required in Rule .04(16) and shall be documented in the staff member's personnel record.
(j) All actions taken that involve utilizing an emergency safety intervention shall be recorded in the camper's case record showing the cause for the emergency safety intervention, the emergency safety intervention used, and, if needed, approval by the director, the staff member in charge of casework services, and the physician who has responsibility for the diagnosis and treatment of the camper's behavior.
(k) Outdoor Child Caring Program shall submit to the Department electronically or by facsimile a report in a format acceptable to the Department within 24 hours whenever an unusual incident occurs regarding emergency safety interventions, including:
1. Any injury requiring medical treatment beyond first aid that is received by a camper as a result of any e mergency safety intervention;
2. For any Outdoor Child Caring Program with a licensed capacity of 20 residents or more, any 30-day period in which three or more instances of emergency safety interventions of a specific camper occurred and/or whenever the Outdoor Child Caring Program has had a total of 10 emergency safety interventions for all campers in care within the 30-day period; and
3. For any Outdoor Child Caring Program with a licensed capacity of less than 20 residents, any 30-day period in which three or more instances of emergency safety interventions of a specific camper occurred and/or whenever the Outdoor Child Caring Program has had a total of five instances for all campers in care within the 30-day period.
(l) Outdoor Child Caring Program shall submit a written report to the program's director on the use of any emergency safety intervention immediately after the conclusion of the intervention and shall further notify the camper's parents or legal guardians regarding the use of the intervention. A copy of such report shall be maintained in the camper's file.
(m) At least once per quarter, the institution, utilizing a master agency restraint log and the camper's case record, shall review the use of all emergency safety interventions for each camper and staff member, including the type of intervention used and the length of time of each use, to determine whether there was a clinical basis for the intervention, whether the use of the emergency safety intervention was warranted, whether any alternatives were considered or employed, the effectiveness of the intervention or alternative, and the need for additional training. Written documentation of all such reviews shall be maintained. Where the Outdoor Child Caring Program identifies opportunities for improvement as a result of such reviews or otherwise, the Outdoor Child Caring Program shall implement these changes through an effective quality improvement plan.
(n) No later than January 1, 2007 and ongoing thereafter, all direct care staff who may be involved in the use of emergency safety interventions, shall have evidence of having satisfactorily completed a nationally recognized training program for emergency safety interventions to protect residents and others from injury, which has been approved by the Department and taught by an appropriately certified trainer in such program.
(o) Manual Holds.
1. Emergency safety interventions utilizing manual holds require at least one trained staff member to carry out the hold. Emergency safety interventions utilizing prone restraints require at least two trained staff members to carry out the hold.
2. Emergency safety interventions shall not include the use of any restraint or manual hold that would potentially impair the camper's ability to breathe or has been determined to be inappropriate for use on a particular camper due to a documented medical or psychological condition.
3. When a manual hold is used upon any camper whose primary mode of communication is sign language, the camper shall be permitted to have his or her hands free from restraint for brief periods during the intervention, except when such freedom may result in physical harm to the camper or others.
4. If the use of a manual hold exceeds 15 consecutive minutes, the facility director or his or her designee, who possesses at least the qualifications of the director and has been fully trained in the facility's emergency safety intervention plan, shall be contacted by a two-way communications device or in person and determine that the continuation of the manual hold is appropriate under the circumstances. Documentation of any consultations and outcomes shall be maintained for each application of a manual hold that exceeds 15 minutes. Manual holds shall not be permitted to continue if the restraint is determined to pose an undue risk to the camper's health given the camper's physical or mental condition.
5. A manual hold may not continue for more than 30 minutes at any one time without the consultation as specified in subparagraph (2) of this subparagraph, and under no circumstances may a manual hold be used for more than one hour total within a 24-hour period.
6. If the use of a manual hold on a camper reaches a total of one hour within a 24-hour period, the staff shall reconsider alternative strategies, document same, and consider notifying the authorities or transporting the camper to a hospital or mental health facility for evaluation.
7. The camper's breathing, verbal responsiveness, and motor control shall be continuously monitored during any manual hold. Written summaries of the monitoring by a trained staff member not currently directly involved in the manual hold shall be recorded every 15 minutes during the duration of the restraint. If only one trained staff member is involved in the restraint and no other staff member is available, written summaries of the monitoring of the manual hold shall be recorded as soon as is practicable, but no later than one hour after the conclusion of the restraint.
(p) Seclusion.
1. If used, seclusion procedures in excess of thirty (30) minutes must be approved by the director or designee. No child shall be placed in a seclusion room or area in excess of one (1) hour within any twenty-four (24) hour period without obtaining authorization for continuing such seclusion from the child's physician, psychiatrist, or licensed psychologist and documenting such authorization in the child's record.
2. A seclusion room or area shall only be used if a camper is in danger of harming himself or herself or others.
3. A camper placed in a seclusion room or area shall be visually monitored at least every 15 minutes.
4. A room or area used for the purposes of seclusion must meet the following criteria:
(i) The room or area shall be constructed and used in such ways that the risk of harm to the camper is minimized;
(ii) The room or area shall be equipped with a viewing window on the door so that staff can monitor the child;
(iii) The room or area shall be lighted and well-ventilated;
(iv) The room or area shall be a minimum fifty (50) square feet in area; and
(v) The room or area must be free of any item that may be used by the camper to cause physical harm to himself/herself or others.
5. No more than one camper shall be placed in the seclusion room or area at a time.
6. A seclusion room or area monitoring log shall be maintained and used to record the following information:
(i) Name of the secluded camper;
(ii) Reason for camper's seclusion;
(iii) Time of camper's placement in the seclusion room or area;
(iv) Name and signature of the staff member that conducted visual monitoring; and
(v) Time of the camper's removal from the seclusion room or area.

Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. R. 290-2-7-.09

O.C.G.A. Secs. 49-5-3, 49-5-12.

Original Rule entitled "Medical and Dental Care" adopted. F. Nov. 8, 1984; eff. Dec. 10, 1984, as specified by the Agency.
Repealed: New Rule entitled "Behavior Management and Emergency Safety Interventions" adopted. F. Aug. 21, 2006; eff. Sept. 10, 2006.
Repealed: New Rule of same title adopted. F. June 5, 2007; eff. June 25, 2007.