| Chapter 330 |
| 2017 -- S 0332 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 09/27/2017 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY - COMPREHENSIVE DISCHARGE PLANNING |
| Introduced By: Senators Miller, Goldin, Satchell, Crowley, and Sosnowski |
| Date Introduced: February 16, 2017 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Section 23-17.26-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-17.26 entitled |
| "Comprehensive Discharge Planning" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 23-17.26-3. Comprehensive discharge planning. |
| (a) On or before January 1, 2017, each hospital and freestanding, emergency-care facility |
| operating in the state of Rhode Island shall submit to the director a comprehensive discharge plan |
| that includes: |
| (1) Evidence of participation in a high-quality, comprehensive discharge-planning and |
| transitions-improvement project operated by a nonprofit organization in this state; or |
| (2) A plan for the provision of comprehensive discharge planning and information to be |
| shared with patients transitioning from the hospital's or freestanding, emergency-care facility's |
| care. Such plan shall contain the adoption of evidence-based practices including, but not limited |
| to: |
| (i) Providing education in the hospital or freestanding, emergency-care facility prior to |
| discharge; |
| (ii) Ensuring patient involvement such that, at discharge, patients and caregivers |
| understand the patient's conditions and medications and have a point of contact for follow-up |
| questions; |
| (iii) With patient consent, attempting to notify the person(s) listed as the patient's |
| emergency contacts and recovery coach before discharge. If the patient refuses to consent to the |
| notification of emergency contacts, such refusal shall be noted in the patient's medical record; |
| (iv) Attempting to identify patients' primary care providers and assisting with scheduling |
| post-discharge follow-up appointments prior to patient discharge; |
| (v) Expanding the transmission of the department of health's continuity-of-care form, or |
| successor program, to include primary care providers' receipt of information at patient discharge |
| when the primary care provider is identified by the patient; and |
| (vi) Coordinating and improving communication with outpatient providers. |
| (3) The discharge plan and transition process shall include recovery planning tools for |
| patients with substance-use disorders, opioid overdoses, and chronic addiction, which plan and |
| transition process shall include the elements contained in subsections (a)(1) or (a)(2), as |
| applicable. In addition, such discharge plan and transition process shall also include: |
| (i) That, with patient consent, each patient presenting to a hospital or freestanding, |
| emergency-care facility with indication of a substance-use disorder, opioid overdose, or chronic |
| addiction shall receive a substance-abuse evaluation, in accordance with the standards in |
| subsection (a)(4)(ii), before discharge. Prior to the dissemination of the standards in subsection |
| (a)(4)(ii), with patient consent, each patient presenting to a hospital or freestanding, emergency- |
| care facility with indication of a substance-use disorder, opioid overdose, or chronic addiction |
| shall receive a substance-abuse evaluation, in accordance with best practices standards, before |
| discharge; |
| (ii) That if, after the completion of a substance-abuse evaluation, in accordance with the |
| standards in subsection (a)(4)(ii), the clinically appropriate inpatient and outpatient services for |
| the treatment of substance-use disorders, opioid overdose, or chronic addiction contained in |
| subsection (a)(3)(iv) are not immediately available, the hospital or freestanding, emergency-care |
| facility shall provide medically necessary and appropriate services with patient consent, until the |
| appropriate transfer of care is completed; |
| (iii) That, with patient consent, pursuant to 21 C.F.R. ยง 1306.07, a physician in a hospital |
| or freestanding, emergency-care facility, who is not specifically registered to conduct a narcotic |
| treatment program, may administer narcotic drugs, including buprenorphine, to a person for the |
| purpose of relieving acute, opioid-withdrawal symptoms, when necessary, while arrangements |
| are being made for referral for treatment. Not more than one day's medication may be |
| administered to the person or for the person's use at one time. Such emergency treatment may be |
| carried out for not more than three (3) days and may not be renewed or extended; |
| (iv) That each patient presenting to a hospital or freestanding, emergency-care facility |
| with indication of a substance-use disorder, opioid overdose, or chronic addiction, shall receive |
| information, made available to the hospital or freestanding, emergency-care facility in accordance |
| with subsection (a)(4)(v), about the availability of clinically appropriate inpatient and outpatient |
| services for the treatment of substance-use disorders, opioid overdose, or chronic addiction, |
| including: |
| (A) Detoxification; |
| (B) Stabilization; |
| (C) Medication-assisted treatment or medication-assisted maintenance services, including |
| methadone, buprenorphine, naltrexone, or other clinically appropriate medications; |
| (D) Inpatient and residential treatment; |
| (E) Licensed clinicians with expertise in the treatment of substance-use disorders, opioid |
| overdoses, and chronic addiction; |
| (F) Certified recovery coaches; and |
| (v) That, when the real-time patient-services database outlined in subsection (a)(4)(vi) |
| becomes available, each patient shall receive real-time information from the hospital or |
| freestanding, emergency-care facility about the availability of clinically appropriate inpatient and |
| outpatient services. |
| (4) On or before January 1, 2017, the director of the department of health, with the |
| director of the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities and hospitals, |
| shall: |
| (i) Develop and disseminate, to all hospitals and freestanding, emergency-care facilities, a |
| regulatory standard for the early introduction of a recovery coach during the pre-admission and/or |
| admission process for patients with substance-use disorders, opioid overdose, or chronic |
| addiction; |
| (ii) Develop and disseminate, to all hospitals and freestanding, emergency-care facilities, |
| substance-abuse evaluation standards for patients with substance-use disorders, opioid overdose, |
| or chronic addiction; |
| (iii) Develop and disseminate, to all hospitals and freestanding, emergency-care facilities, |
| pre-admission, admission, and discharge regulatory standards, a recovery plan, and voluntary |
| transition process for patients with substance-use disorders, opioid overdose, or chronic addiction. |
| Recommendations from the 2015 Rhode Island governor's overdose prevention and intervention |
| task force strategic plan may be incorporated into the standards as a guide, but may be amended |
| and modified to meet the specific needs of each hospital and freestanding, emergency-care |
| facility; |
| (iv) Develop and disseminate best practices standards for health care clinics, urgent-care |
| centers, and emergency-diversion facilities regarding protocols for patient screening, transfer, and |
| referral to clinically appropriate inpatient and outpatient services contained in subsection |
| (a)(3)(iv); |
| (v) Develop regulations for patients presenting to hospitals and freestanding, emergency- |
| care facilities with indication of a substance-use disorder, opioid overdose, or chronic addiction to |
| ensure prompt, voluntary access to clinically appropriate inpatient and outpatient services |
| contained in subsection (a)(3)(iv); |
| (vi) Develop a strategy to assess, create, implement, and maintain a database of real-time |
| availability of clinically appropriate inpatient and outpatient services contained in subsection |
| (a)(3)(iv) of this section on or before January 1, 2018. |
| (5) On or before September 1, 2017, each hospital and freestanding, emergency-care |
| facility operating in the state of Rhode Island shall submit to the director a discharge plan and |
| transition process that shall include provisions for patients with a primary diagnosis of a mental |
| health disorder without a co-occurring substance use disorder. |
| (6) On or before January 1, 2018, the director of the department of health, with the |
| director of the department of behavioral healthcare, developmental disabilities, and hospitals, |
| shall develop and disseminate mental health best practices standards for health care clinics, urgent |
| care centers, and emergency diversion facilities regarding protocols for patient screening, |
| transfer, and referral to clinically appropriate inpatient and outpatient services. The best practice |
| standards shall include information and strategies to facilitate clinically appropriate prompt |
| transfers and referrals from hospitals and freestanding, emergency-care facilities to less intensive |
| settings. |
| SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC001497/SUB A |
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