(a)

Terms Used In Tennessee Code 68-11-209

  • Adult care home: means a single family residence licensed pursuant to this part in which twenty-four-hour residential care, including assistance with activities of daily living, is provided in a homelike environment to no more than five (5) adults who are elderly or have a disability. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Adult care home provider: means a person twenty-one (21) years of age or older who owns and operates an adult care home and meets all education, training and experience requirements prescribed in this part and in regulations promulgated by the board pursuant to §. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Amendment: A proposal to alter the text of a pending bill or other measure by striking out some of it, by inserting new language, or both. Before an amendment becomes part of the measure, thelegislature must agree to it.
  • Assisted-care living facility: means a facility, building, establishment, complex or distinct part thereof that accepts primarily aged persons for domiciliary care and services as described in this section. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • commission: means the health facilities commission created by §. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Department: means the department of health. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Dependent: A person dependent for support upon another.
  • Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other.
  • Facility: means any institution, place or building providing health care services that is required to be licensed under this chapter. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Home for the aged: means a home represented and held out to the general public as a home which accepts primarily aged persons for relatively permanent, domiciliary care. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Hospital: means any institution, place, building or agency represented and held out to the general public as ready, willing and able to furnish care, accommodations, facilities and equipment for the use, in connection with the services of a physician or dentist, of one (1) or more nonrelated persons who may be suffering from deformity, injury or disease or from any other condition for which nursing, medical or surgical services would be appropriate for care, diagnosis or treatment. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Nursing home: means any institution, place, building or agency represented and held out to the general public for the express or implied purpose of providing care for one (1) or more nonrelated persons who are not acutely ill, but who do require skilled nursing care and related medical services. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Person: means any individual, partnership, association, corporation, other business entity, state or local governmental agencies and entities, and federal agencies and entities to the extent permitted by federal law. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • physician: includes a podiatrist licensed under title 63, chapter 3. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Resident manager: means a person twenty-one (21) years of age or older who lives in an adult care home and oversees the day-to-day operation of the adult care home on behalf of the adult care home provider and meets all education, training and experience requirements prescribed in this part and in regulations promulgated by the board pursuant to §. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Statute: A law passed by a legislature.
  • Substitute caregiver: means any person twenty-one (21) years of age or older who temporarily oversees care and services in an adult care home during the short-term absence of the adult care home provider or resident manager and meets all education, training and experience requirements prescribed in this part and in regulations promulgated by the board pursuant to §. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Traumatic brain injury residential home: means a facility owned and operated by a community-based traumatic brain injury (TBI) adult care home provider in which residential care, including assistance with activities of daily living, is provided in a homelike environment to disabled adults suffering from the effects of a traumatic brain injury as defined in §. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • Traumatic brain injury residential home provider: means a person twenty-one (21) years of age or older who owns and operates a traumatic brain injury residential home. See Tennessee Code 68-11-201
  • United States: includes the District of Columbia and the several territories of the United States. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
  • written: includes printing, typewriting, engraving, lithography, and any other mode of representing words and letters. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
(1) The board has the duty and power to adopt such rules and regulations pertaining to the operation and management of any facilities required to be licensed under this part, and to rescind, amend or modify such rules and regulations from time to time, as are necessary in the public interest and particularly for the establishment and maintenance of standards of hospitalization required for the efficient care of patients or home for the aged, residential HIV supportive living facility, assisted-care living facility, adult care home residents, or traumatic brain injury residential home residents.
(2) For renal dialysis clinics, any rules promulgated after July 1, 2001, but before January 1, 2004, shall not be implemented until January 1, 2004. In addition to any filing or hearing required by the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act, compiled in title 4, chapter 5, regarding such initial rules for renal dialysis clinics, the department shall file a notice of proposed rulemaking concerning such rules promulgated pursuant to this section with the health committee of the house of representatives and the health and welfare committee of the senate, at least thirty (30) days prior to the filing of such rules with the secretary of state pursuant to the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act. The department shall present the substance of such rules in hearings before the previously named committees before the hearing of the rules by the government operations committee. No rule may be filed with the secretary of state, unless the department has complied with this section.
(b) The board has the power to waive any of the rules and regulations pertaining to any health care facility covered within the scope of this part, where such waiver would not have a detrimental effect on the health, safety and welfare of the public.
(c)

(1) The board shall prescribe, by rules and regulations adopted by the board, the minimum standards as to equipment and provision for the care of patients or home for the aged, residential HIV supportive living facility, assisted-care living facility, adult care home residents, or traumatic brain injury residential home residents to which an institution must conform in order to operate lawfully as any facilities required to be licensed under this part.
(2) The board shall assess, in writing, the fiscal impact on licensed nursing homes relating to the adoption, repeal or amendment of any rule or minimum standard as to equipment or operating procedure. The cost necessary to bring a facility into compliance with such a directive by the board shall be made available to the comptroller of the treasury as a component of allowable cost in accordance with medicare reimbursement principles. Such costs, however, shall be subject to all reimbursement limits and procedures specified in statute and state regulations for the reimbursement of nursing home services.
(d)

(1) Any person who wishes to serve as the chief administrator of a licensed residential or institutional home for the aged, residential HIV supportive living facility, or assisted-care living facility shall first be certified by the board as a residential/institutional home administrator. This subsection (d) shall not apply to any individual licensed as a nursing home administrator pursuant to title 63, chapter 16. To be certified as a residential/institutional home administrator, a person must be a high school graduate or the holder of a general equivalence diploma; provided, that this requirement shall not apply to a person who served as the chief administrator of a licensed residential home for the aged, residential HIV supportive living facility, or assisted-care living facility during any continuous period of at least nine (9) months’ duration preceding January 1, 1990, or who served as the chief administrator of a licensed institutional home for the aged, residential HIV supportive living facility, or assisted-care living facility during any continuous period of at least nine (9) months’ duration preceding January 1, 1992. Certification shall not be issued, maintained, or renewed for any person convicted of a criminal offense involving the abuse or intentional neglect of an elderly or vulnerable individual. As a requisite for biennial renewal of certification, a person shall submit written proof of attendance during at least twenty-four (24) classroom hours of continuing education courses approved by the board and designed to enhance or reinforce the skills, knowledge and competence required of residential and institutional home administrators.
(2) The twenty-four (24) hours of continuing education courses required by subdivision (d)(1) shall include:

(A) State rules and regulations for homes for the aged;
(B) Health care management;
(C) Nutrition and food service;
(D) Financial management; and
(E) Health lifestyles.
(3) Persons conducting continuing education courses pursuant to this subsection (d) shall be subject to the following:

(A) A program offered for credit must be related to the operations of the homes for the aged, the activities of daily living of the residents, or other pertinent information deemed appropriate to the quality of life for residents; and
(B) All curricula pertaining to the educational courses and the names of the instructors must be submitted to the board for approval prior to offering any course to administrators.
(4) In accordance with the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act, the board shall promulgate such rules as shall be necessary to implement this subsection (d) in an orderly and efficient manner; provided, that such rules shall not, as a requisite for certification or recertification, impose any substantive requirements in addition to those set forth in this subsection (d). The rules shall establish fees for initial certification and for biennial renewal of certification. The fees shall be set in an amount sufficient to pay all expenses incurred by the board in implementing this subsection (d).
(e)

(1) Pursuant to the authority granted in subsection (a), the board, in consultation with the Tennessee Health Care Association, shall promulgate rules for the training and testing of nursing assistants in nursing homes that:

(A) Require annual publishing of testing schedules and sites;
(B) Require that test sites be located so that no individual seeking to take the test has to drive any farther than thirty (30) miles to reach a test site;
(C) Require tests to be held as scheduled regardless of the number of individuals scheduled for the test, unless no individuals are scheduled at a particular test site;
(D) Require publishing of the number of individuals passing and failing each test;
(E) Establish a minimum passing grade for the examination; and
(F) Establish a seventy-five-hour training program.
(2) Nothing in this subsection (e) is to be construed to alter or impede nursing assistant training and testing programs already in place pending the implementation of the rules described in subdivision (e)(1).
(3) Any existing committee charged with developing the nursing assistant test shall include at least three (3) representatives of the nursing home industry with an education or nursing background and nominated by the Tennessee Health Care Association.
(4) Nursing assistant testing may, at the nursing assistant’s option, be conducted at the facility in which the nursing assistant is or will be employed, unless the facility has had its nursing assistant training program withdrawn pursuant to state or federal regulations. The testing of nurse assistants may be proctored by facility personnel, as long as such testing is secure from tampering, is standardized and is scored by a testing, educational or other organization approved by the board. Such testing shall require no scoring by facility personnel. The board shall revoke a facility’s right to proctor such testing in any situation in which the board finds evidence of tampering by facility staff. For purposes of this subdivision (e)(4), “proctor” means supervision of an examination or test.
(5) Notwithstanding a law to the contrary, and pursuant to the authority granted in subsection (a), no later than July 1, 2021, the board shall promulgate emergency rules to permit individuals who qualified as temporary nurse aides in nursing homes on or after the beginning date of the national public health emergency as declared by the United States secretary of health and human services on January 31, 2020, to become certified as nursing assistants in this state and be placed on the nurse aide registry.
(f) Notwithstanding any rules and regulations of the board, a hospital may provide outpatient diagnostic and therapeutic services at locations other than the hospital’s main campus without obtaining a waiver from the board; provided, that such other locations are under the sole control of the hospital.
(g) Notwithstanding any rule adopted by the board or any other provisions of this chapter, a hospital that satisfies the standards established by the joint commission on accreditation of health care organizations relative to the timely completion of medical records shall be deemed to comply with the rules of the board relative to the timely completion of medical records.
(h)

(1) The board shall promulgate in regulations requirements for education, experience and training, continuous education, background check and abuse registry checks for Level 2 adult care home providers and traumatic brain injury residential home providers, resident managers, substitute caregivers and staff. These requirements shall be commensurate with the expected responsibilities and care of residents in each applicable setting, and shall be dependent upon the level of licensure. The education, experience and requirements for Level 2 adult care home providers and traumatic brain injury residential home providers shall be sufficient to demonstrate competency in caring for residents and the ability to adequately maintain the health, safety and welfare of residents. The board shall develop additional standards for Level 2 adult care home providers and traumatic brain injury residential home providers that require education, training and experience necessary to adequately address the needs of persons with traumatic brain injury or ventilator dependent persons.
(2) The rules required under subdivision (h)(1) shall include, but not be limited to, the following:

(A) A resident manager for a Level 2 adult care home provider must meet the education, experience and training requirements of a Level 2 adult care home provider;
(B) A Level 2 adult care home provider serving ventilator dependent residents must hold a current professional license or employ a resident manager who holds a current professional license as a physician, nurse practitioner, registered nurse or respiratory therapist who is trained and experienced in the care of ventilator dependent residents;
(C) A Level 2 adult care home provider serving residents with traumatic brain injury must hold a national certification by the Academy of Certified Brain Injury Specialists as a Certified Brain Injury Specialist (CBIS), or hold a current professional license or employ a resident manager who holds a current professional license as a physician, nurse practitioner, registered nurse, licensed rehabilitation professional, CBIS or licensed mental health professional who is trained and experienced in the care and rehabilitation of residents with traumatic brain injury;
(D) A substitute caregiver for a Level 2 adult care home for persons with traumatic brain injury must hold a national certification by the Academy of Certified Brain Injury Specialists as a CBIS, or hold a current professional license as a physician, nurse practitioner, registered nurse, licensed rehabilitation professional or licensed mental health professional who is trained and experienced in the care and rehabilitation of residents with traumatic brain injury and must demonstrate competency in caring for persons with traumatic brain injury;
(E) A Level 2 resident manager serving residents with traumatic brain injury must hold a national certification by the Academy of Certified Brain Injury Specialists as a CBIS, or hold a current professional license as a physician, nurse practitioner, registered nurse, licensed rehabilitation professional or licensed mental health professional who is trained and experienced in the care and rehabilitation of residents with traumatic brain injury and must demonstrate competency in caring for persons with traumatic brain injury;
(F) A substitute caregiver for a Level 2 adult care home serving ventilator dependent residents must hold a current professional license as a physician, nurse practitioner, registered nurse or respiratory therapist who is trained and experienced in the care of ventilator dependent residents and must demonstrate competency in caring for ventilator dependent residents;
(G) A traumatic brain injury residential home provider shall hold national certification by the Academy of Certified Brain Injury Specialists as a Certified Brain Injury Specialist (CBIS) or hold a current professional license as a physician, nurse practitioner, registered nurse, licensed rehabilitation professional, or licensed mental health professional who is trained and experienced in the care and rehabilitation of disabled adults suffering from the effects of a traumatic brain injury; and
(H) Traumatic brain injury residential home providers shall not be required to live in or employ a resident manager or substitute caregiver to live in a traumatic brain injury residential home. However, a traumatic brain injury residential home provider shall employ staff members to supervise the residents at all times, within the residence, including overnights and during weekends. The staff members providing overnight care and/or supervision must hold a national certification by the Academy of Certified Brain Injury Specialists as a Certified Brain Injury Specialist (CBIS), or hold a current professional license as a physician, nurse practitioner, registered nurse, licensed rehabilitation professional, or licensed mental health professional who is trained and experienced in the care and rehabilitation of residents with traumatic brain injury.
(3) All adult care home providers, resident managers and substitute caregivers shall complete annually twelve (12) hours of continuing education related to care of the elderly and persons with disabilities and business operations of adult care homes.
(4) The adult care home provider shall train all staff to meet the routine and emergency needs of residents. The adult care home provider is also responsible for training resident managers, substitute caregivers and staff on the health care tasks that can be administered through self-direction.
(5) The adult care home provider shall be responsible for supervision, training and overall conduct of resident managers, substitute caregivers and staff as it relates to their job performance and responsibilities.
(i) For developing a plan of care in Level 2 adult care homes, a licensed healthcare professional may include, when appropriate, persons holding a national certification by the Academy of Certified Brain Injury Specialists as a Certified Brain Injury Specialist (CBIS).