Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 6, November 4, 2024
Section 12VAC30-122-410 - In-home support serviceA. Service description. In-home support service means a residential service that takes place in the individual's home, family home, or community settings that typically supplement the primary care provided by the individual, family, or other unpaid caregiver and is designed to ensure the health, safety, and welfare of the individual. The individual shall be living in his own home or his family home. This service shall include a skill building (formerly called training) component, along with the provision of supports that enable an individual to acquire, retain, or improve the self-help, socialization, and adaptive skills required for successfully living in his community. In-home support service shall be covered in the FIS and CL waivers.B. Criteria and allowable activities. To be eligible for in-home support service, individuals shall require help with adaptive skills necessary to reside successfully in the home and community-based settings. Allowable activities include the following as may be appropriate for the individual as documented in his plan for supports:
1. Skill-building and routine supports related to ADLs and IADLs;2. Skill-building, routine supports, and safety supports related to the use of community resources, such as transportation, shopping, dining at restaurants, and participating in social and recreational activities;3. Supporting the individual in replacing challenging behaviors with positive, accepted behaviors for home and community environments; 4. Monitoring the individual's health and physical condition and providing routine and safety supports with medication or other medical needs; 5. Providing supports with transportation to and from community sites and resources; and6. Providing general supports as needed.C. Service units and limitations. 1. The unit shall be one hour and shall be reimbursed according to the number of individuals served.2. In-home support service shall not typically be provided 24 hours per day but may be authorized for brief periods up to 24 hours a day when necessary.3. In-home support service shall not be covered for the individual simultaneously with the coverage of the group home residential service, supported living residential service, or sponsored residential service.4. Individuals may have in-home support service, personal assistance service, and respite service in their ISP but shall not receive these Medicaid-reimbursed services simultaneously (i.e., on the same dates and times).5. All individuals shall have a backup plan prior to initiating services in cases of emergency or should the provider be unable to render services as needed. This backup plan shall be shared with the provider and support coordinator at the onset of services and updated with the provider and support coordinator as necessary. D. Provider qualifications and requirements. 1. All providers of the in-home support service shall have current, signed participation agreements with DMAS. The provider designated in this agreement shall directly submit claims to DMAS for reimbursement.2. Providers of the in-home support service shall be licensed by DBHDS as providers of supportive in-home service.3. Providers shall ensure that staff providing in-home supports meet provider training and competency requirements as specified in 12VAC30-122-180.4. Supervision of DSPs shall be provided consistent with the requirements in 12VAC30-122-120 by a supervisor meeting the requirements of 12VAC35-105-590. Providers shall make available for inspection documentation of supervision, and this documentation shall be completed and signed by the staff person designated to perform the supervision and oversight. This documentation shall include, at a minimum, the following: (i) date of contact or observation, (ii) person contacted or observed, (iii) a summary about the direct support professional's performance and service delivery, and (iv) any action planned or taken to correct problems identified during supervision and oversight. E. Service documentation and requirements. 1. Providers shall include signed and dated documentation of the following in each individual's record: a. A copy of the completed, standard, age-appropriate assessment form as described in 12VAC30-122-200.b. The provider's plan for supports per requirements detailed in 12VAC30-122-120.c. Documentation as detailed in 12VAC30-122-120. Data shall be collected as described in the ISP, analyzed to determine if the strategies are effective, summarized, then clearly documented in the progress notes or supports checklist.d. Documentation to support units of service delivered, and the documentation shall correspond with billing. Providers shall maintain separate documentation for each type of service rendered for an individual.e. A written review supported by documentation in the individual's record that is submitted to the support coordinator at least quarterly with the plan for supports, if modified. For the annual review and every time supporting documentation is updated, the supporting documentation shall be reviewed with the individual or family/caregiver, as appropriate, and such review shall be documented. f. An attendance log or similar document that is maintained and that indicates the date, type of service rendered, and the number of hours and units provided, including specific timeframe.g. All correspondence to the individual and the individual's family/caregiver, as appropriate, the support coordinator, DMAS, and DBHDS.h. Written documentation of all contacts with the individual's family/caregiver, physicians, providers, and all professionals regarding the individual.2. Provider documentation shall support all claims submitted for DMAS reimbursement. Claims that are not supported by appropriate documentation shall be subject to recovery by DMAS as a result of utilization reviews and audits.12 Va. Admin. Code § 30-122-410
Derived from Virginia Register Volume 37, Issue 14, eff. 3/31/2021.Statutory Authority: § 32.1-325 of the Code of Virginia; 42 USC § 1396 et seq.