Title: CMS Hospital Restraint and Seclusion - Guidelines 2024
1RESTRAINT AND SECLUSION 2024 A Problematic CMS
Standard
Presented By Laura A. Dixon, Esq. BS, JD, RN,
CPHRM President, Healthcare Risk Education,
and Consulting, LLC 1
2Speaker
- Laura A. Dixon, Esq.
- BS, JD, RN, CPHRM
- President, Healthcare Risk
- Education and Consulting, LLC
- 303-955-8104
- ldesq_at_comcast.net
- Email questions to CMS
- Critical Access Hospitals qsog_CAH_at_cms.hhs.gov.
- Acute hospitals qsog_hospital_at_cms.hhs.gov.
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2
3CMS Investigates Restraint Death
- March 2017 article Greenville Hospital to lose
its Medicare contract unless it corrects a
deficiency in a CMS Survey - 48-year-old patient dies while strapped to a
gurney - Died of traumatic asphyxiation
- Coroner said his death was a homicide
- Admitted with gun shot wound to his arm
- He struggled with hospital security who secured
him face down on a gurney
3
4More RNs Reduce Need for Restraints
- August 2016 study found restraints are used less
when - more nurses are on duty
- Use of restraints has declined steadily
- Restraints can lead to agitation, confusion, and
- adverse psychological and health effects
- Some hospitals compensate the shortage of RNs
with other staff - Found this leads to increase in restraint use and
that quality - of care suffers
- Staggs, V.S., Olds, D.M., Cramer, E. et al. J GEN
INTERN MED (2016). doi10.1007/s11606-016-3830-z
at http//link.springer.com/article/10.10072Fs11
606-016-3830-z
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52022 Article Restraints in Hospitals
- Study utilized three topic-based focus groups
- 19 participants from nursing, PT and medicine
- Participants noted lack of precise hospital
guidelines - Documentation often lacked the effect of
restraint on - patients behavior
- Restraints were described as a safety measure
- Implementation most often led by nurses
- Attitudes and experiences were main detriments
for restraint - use
- Experienced nurses tended to use restraints less
- Prior experience with violence ? more use
- https//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC88590
77/pdf/NO P2-9-1311.pdf
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6INTRODUCTION TO CONDITIONS OF PARTICIPATION
Restraint and Seclusion
6
7How it Works
- Regulation published in the Federal Register
- CMS publishes the regulation in a transmittal
- Will develop Interpretive guidelines and survey
procedures - Updates the hospital CoP manual
- Types of surveys
- Certification
- Complaint
- Validation survey
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8CMS COMPLAINT MANUAL
9Death Reporting Investigations 5170
- Applies to all deemed, non-deemed hospitals, CAH
distinct part psychiatric (DPU) and rehab units - Required to report death associated with use of
restraint/seclusion to Regional Office NOT
State agency - Submit report electronically by fax/email Form
- 10455
- ASPEN Automated Survey Processing Environment
- ACTS Complaint Tracking System
10Conditions of Participation Restraint Seclusion
Tag Nos. 154 214
11SELUSION Tab No. 162
12Definition 162
- Seclusion
- Involuntary confinement
- Alone in a room or area
- From which they are physically prevented from
leaving - May only be used for the management of violent or
- self-destructive behavior (V/SD behavior)
- Jeopardizes the immediate physical safety of the
patient, a - staff member, or others
- (Only tag number where seclusion identified
separately)
13Reducing Use of Seclusion
- Learning from Each Others Success Stories and
Ideas for Reducing Restraint/Seclusion in
Behavioral Health - Tools and forms in appendix
- Tool for behavioral health patients
- Published in 2003 by many organizations
including - American Psychiatric Nurses Assn. National
Association of Psychiatric Health Systems
(NAPHS) with support of AHA - See NAPHS and AHA guiding principles1
- 1 www.naphs.org www.apna.org, www.psych.org, or
www.apna.org, - http//www.naphs.org/catalog/ClinicResources/index
.html
14RESTRAINTS Standards and Guidelines
15Restraint and Seclusion 154
- All patients have a right to be free from
unnecessary physical or mental abuse, and
corporal punishment - Only used
- When necessary
- Not as coercion, discipline, convenience or
retaliation - For patient safety
- Discontinued at earliest possible time
16Reasons to Restrain
- Check all that apply
- Unable to follow directions for safety
- Aggressive
- Disruptive/combative
- Self injury
- Interference with treatments
- Removal of medical devices
- Other
17Medical Condition Need for Restraint
- If the assessment indicates a need to protect the
patient from harm must use least restrictive
intervention - Can consider restraint
- Weigh risk of using restraint against risk
presented by - behavior
- Request by patient/family not sufficient basis
- If need confirmed practitioner must determine
type with least risk and most benefit
18Documentation
- Staff must demonstrate restraint is least
restrictive - Through documentation
- Protects patient
- Based on assessments
- Assessments and documentation must be ongoing to
- show continued need
- Once a day may not be sufficient clinical
condition changes over time
19Use of Weapons
- Use of weapons in application of restraint or
seclusion not considered a safe, appropriate
health care intervention - Pepper spray Mace Nightstick Tasers
Cattle prods - Stun guns Pistols
- Security can carry per policy, State/Federal law
- Not considered health care intervention
- Is a law enforcement action
- CMS does not support use of weapons by any
hospital staff as a means of subduing a patient
to place in restraint/seclusion
20Not Covered By Rule Law Enforcement
- Handcuffs
- Manacles
- Shackles
- Other chain-type
- restraint devices
- Non-hospital
- Employed
- Contracted law
- enforcement
- Custody
- Detention
- Public Safety
- Not considered safe nor appropriate
interventions - Ensure PP mention
21Items to Document
- Hygiene
- Any injuries
- Continued need for use
- Adequate justification for continued use
- Skin integrity
- Circulation
- Respiration
- IO
- Level of supervision appropriate to meet
patients safety need
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22JOINT COMMISSION RESTRAINT AND SECLUSION
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23Impact of Restraint
- TJC 40 of restraint-related deaths were caused
by unintended asphyxiation during restraint - Creates a negative response to the situation and
can be - humiliating to the patient
- Can be physically and emotionally traumatizing to
the staff involved - It impacts the trust between the patient and the
staff - Restraint and seclusion should be a last resort
- And only done to protect the patient or the staff
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24Boarding Behavioral Health Patients
- Many hospitals board behavioral health patients
- pending an inpatient psyche bed due to a
shortages - Important to ensure that the patient is in a safe
room to prevent inpatient suicide - Many EDs have separate area to house these
patients - Free guide on how to create a safe room called
the Behavioral Health Design Guide, at Facility
Guideline Institute - Includes self assessment tool
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25The End
Questions???
- Laura A. Dixon, Esq.
- BS, JD, RN, CPHRM
- President, Healthcare Risk Education, and
Consulting, LLC - 303-955-8104
- ldesq_at_comcast.net
Register Now
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