CMS Hospital Restraint and Seclusion - Guidelines 2024 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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CMS Hospital Restraint and Seclusion - Guidelines 2024

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Restraint and Seclusion is a hot spot with both CMS and the Joint Commission and an area where hospitals are frequently cited as non-compliance. This program will discuss this most problematic standard. Every hospital that accepts Medicare patients will have to comply with the regulations even if accredited by the Joint Commission, HFAP, CIHQ, or DNV Healthcare. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Date added: 25 June 2024
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Title: CMS Hospital Restraint and Seclusion - Guidelines 2024


1
RESTRAINT 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
2
Speaker
  • 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.

2
2
3
CMS 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
4
More 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

4
5
2022 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

21
6
INTRODUCTION TO CONDITIONS OF PARTICIPATION
Restraint and Seclusion
6
7
How 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

7
8
CMS COMPLAINT MANUAL
9
Death 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

10
Conditions of Participation Restraint Seclusion
Tag Nos. 154 214
11
SELUSION Tab No. 162
12
Definition 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)

13
Reducing 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

14
RESTRAINTS Standards and Guidelines
15
Restraint 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

16
Reasons 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

17
Medical 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

18
Documentation
  • 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

19
Use 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

20
Not Covered By Rule Law Enforcement
  • What
  • Who
  • Handcuffs
  • Manacles
  • Shackles
  • Other chain-type
  • restraint devices
  • Non-hospital
  • Employed
  • Contracted law
  • enforcement
  • Purpose
  • Not hospital staff
  • Custody
  • Detention
  • Public Safety
  • Not considered safe nor appropriate
    interventions
  • Ensure PP mention

21
Items 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

21
22
JOINT COMMISSION RESTRAINT AND SECLUSION
22
23
Impact 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

23
24
Boarding 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

24
25
The 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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