Final Text
As used in this chapter, the following words and terms shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Board" means the State Board of Health.
"Chief executive officer" means a job descriptive term used to identify the individual appointed by the governing body to act in its behalf in the overall management of the hospital. Job titles may include administrator, superintendent, director, executive director, president, vice-president, and executive vice-president.
"Commissioner" means the State Health Commissioner.
"Consultant" means one who provides services or advice upon request.
"Department" means an organized section of the hospital.
"Designated support person" means a person who is knowledgeable about the needs of a person with a disability and who is designated, orally or in writing, by the individual with a disability, the individual's guardian, or the individual's care provider to provide support and assistance, including physical assistance, emotional support, assistance with communication or decision-making, or any other assistance necessary as a result of the person's disability, to the person with a disability at any time during which health care services are provided.
"Direction" means authoritative policy or procedural guidance for the accomplishment of a function or activity.
"Facilities" means building(s), equipment, and supplies necessary for implementation of services by personnel.
"Full-time" means a 37-1/2 to 40 hour work week.
"General hospital" means institutions as defined by § 32.1-123 of the Code of Virginia with an organized medical staff; with permanent facilities that include inpatient beds; and with medical services, including physician services, dentist services and continuous nursing services, to provide diagnosis and treatment for patients who have a variety of medical and dental conditions that may require various types of care, such as medical, surgical, and maternity.
"Home health care department/service/program" means a formally structured organizational unit of the hospital that is designed to provide health services to patients in their place of residence and meets Part II (12VAC5-381-150 et seq.) of the regulations adopted by the board for the licensure of home care organizations in Virginia.
"Medical" means pertaining to or dealing with the healing art and the science of medicine.
"Nursing care unit" means an organized jurisdiction of nursing service in which nursing services are provided on a continuous basis.
"Nursing home" means an institution or any identifiable component of any institution as defined by § 32.1-123 of the Code of Virginia with permanent facilities that include inpatient beds and whose primary function is the provision, on a continuing basis, of nursing and health related services for the treatment of patients who may require various types of long term care, such as skilled care and intermediate care.
"Nursing services" means patient care services pertaining to the curative, palliative, restorative, or preventive aspects of nursing that are prepared or supervised by a registered nurse.
"Office of Licensure and Certification" or "OLC" means the Office of Licensure and Certification of the Virginia Department of Health.
"Organized" means administratively and functionally structured.
"Organized medical staff" means a formal organization of physicians and dentists with the delegated responsibility and authority to maintain proper standards of medical care and to plan for continued betterment of that care.
"Outpatient hospital" means institutions as defined by § 32.1-123 of the Code of Virginia that primarily provide facilities for the performance of surgical procedures on outpatients. Such patients may require treatment in a medical environment exceeding the normal capability found in a physician's office, but do not require inpatient hospitalization.
"Ownership/person" means any individual, partnership, association, trust, corporation, municipality, county, governmental agency, or any other legal or commercial entity that owns or controls the physical facilities and/or manages or operates a hospital.
"Rural hospital" means any general hospital in a county classified by the federal Office of Management and Budget (OMB) as rural, any hospital designated as a critical access hospital, any general hospital that is eligible to receive funds under the federal Small Rural Hospital Improvement Grant Program, or any general hospital that notifies the commissioner of its desire to retain its rural status when that hospital is in a county reclassified by the OMB as a metropolitan statistical area as of June 6, 2003.
"Service" means a functional division of the hospital. Also used to indicate the delivery of care.
"Smoke evacuation system" has the same meaning as ascribed to the term in subdivision B 32 of §32.1-127 of the Code of Virginia.
"Special hospital" means institutions as defined by § 32.1-123 of the Code of Virginia that provide care for a specialized group of patients or limit admissions to provide diagnosis and treatment for patients who have specific conditions (e.g., tuberculosis, orthopedic, pediatric, maternity).
"Special care unit" means an appropriately equipped area of the hospital where there is a concentration of physicians, nurses, and others who have special skills and experience to provide optimal medical care for patients assigned to the unit.
"Staff privileges" means authority to render medical care in the granting institution within well-defined limits, based on the individual's professional license and the individual's experience, competence, ability, and judgment.
"Unit" means a functional division or facility of the hospital.
A. Hospitals with an emergency department/service shall have 24-hour staff coverage and shall have at least one physician on call who is primarily responsible for the emergency department on duty and physically present at all times. Hospitals without emergency service shall have written policies governing the handling of emergencies.
B. No less than one registered nurse shall be assigned to the emergency service on each shift. Such assignment need not be exclusive of other duties, but must have priority over all other assignments.
C. Those hospitals that provide ambulance services shall comply with Article 2.1 (§ 32.1-111.1 et seq.) of Chapter 4 of Title 32.1 of the Code of Virginia and 12VAC5-31.
D. The hospital shall provide equipment, drugs, supplies, and ancillary services commensurate with the scope of anticipated needs, including radiology and laboratory services and facilities for handling and administering of blood and blood products. Emergency drugs and equipment shall remain accessible in the emergency department at all times.
E. Current roster of medical staff members on emergency call, including alternates and medical specialists or consultants shall be posted in the emergency department.
F. Hospitals shall make special training available, as required, for emergency department personnel.
G. Toxicology reference material and poison antidote information shall be available along with telephone numbers of the nearest poison control centers.
H. Each emergency department shall post notice of the existence of a human trafficking hotline to alert possible witnesses or victims of human trafficking to the availability of a means to gain assistance or report crimes. This notice shall be in a place readily visible and accessible to the public, such as the patient admitting area or public or patient restrooms. The notice shall meet the requirements of § 40.1-11.3 C of the Code of Virginia.
I. Every hospital with an emergency department shall establish protocols to ensure that security personnel of the emergency department receive training appropriate to the populations served by the emergency department. This training may include training based on a trauma-informed approach in identifying and safely addressing situations involving patients or other persons who pose a risk of harm to themselves or others due to mental illness or substance abuse or who are experiencing a mental health crisis.
J. Each hospital with an emergency department shall establish a protocol for treatment of individuals experiencing a substance use-related emergency to include the completion of appropriate assessments or screenings to identify medical interventions necessary for the treatment of the individual in the emergency department. The protocol may also include a process for patients who are discharged directly from the emergency department for the recommendation of follow-up care following discharge for any identified substance use disorder, depression, or mental health disorder, as appropriate, that may include:
1. Instructions for distribution of naloxone;
2. Referrals to peer recovery specialists and community-based providers of behavioral health services; or
3. Referrals for pharmacotherapy for treatment of drug or alcohol dependence or mental health diagnoses.
A. The surgical department/service shall have a defined organization and shall be governed by written policies and procedures.
B. The surgical department/service shall be under the medical supervision of a physician who meets the requirements of the medical staff bylaws.
C. The operating suite shall be:
1. Under the supervision of a registered professional nurse.
2. Designed to include operating and recovery rooms, proper scrubbing, sterilizing and dressing room facilities, storage for anesthetic agents and shall be equipped as required by the scope and complexity of the services.
3. Provided with prominently posted safety policies and procedures.
D. A roster of current surgical privileges of every surgical staff member shall be maintained on file in the operating suite.
E. An operating room register shall be maintained which shall include as a minimum:
1. Patient's name and hospital number;
2. Pre- and post-operative diagnosis;
3. Complications, if any;
4. Name of surgeon, first assistant, anesthesiologist or anesthetist, scrub nurse and circulating nurse;
5. Operation performed; and
6. Type of anesthesia.
F. Every hospital where surgical procedures are performed shall adopt a policy requiring the use of a smoke evacuation system for all planned surgical procedures that are likely to generate surgical smoke.
F.G. Policies and procedures governing infection control and reporting techniques shall be established in accordance with 12VAC5-410-490.
G.H. The patient's medical chart shall be available in the surgical suite at time of surgery and shall contain no less than the following information:
1. A medical history and physical examination;
2. Evidence of appropriate informed consent; and
3. A pre-operative diagnosis.
H.I. An accurate and complete description of operative procedure shall be recorded by the operating surgeon within 48 hours following completion of surgery and made part of the patient's clinical record.
A. Each outpatient surgical hospital shall develop a policy and procedures manual that shall include provisions covering the following items:
1. The types of emergency and elective procedures that may be performed in the facility.
2. Types of anesthesia that may be used.
3. Admissions and discharges, including:
a. Criteria for evaluating the patient before admission and before discharge; and
b. Protocols to ensure that any patient scheduled to receive an elective surgical procedure for which the patient can reasonably be expected to require outpatient physical therapy as a follow-up treatment after discharge is informed that the patient:
(1) Is expected to require outpatient physical therapy as a follow-up treatment; and
(2) Will be required to select a physical therapy provider prior to being discharged from the hospital.
4. Written informed consent of patient prior to the initiation of any procedures.
5. Procedures for housekeeping and infection control and prevention.
6. Disaster preparedness.
7. Facility security.
B. Every outpatient surgical hospital where surgical procedures are performed shall adopt a policy requiring the use of a smoke evacuation system for all planned surgical procedures that are likely to generate surgical smoke.
B.C. A copy of approved policies and procedures and revisions thereto shall be made available to the OLC upon request.
C.D. Each outpatient surgical hospital shall establish a protocol relating to the rights and responsibilities of patients based on Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations' Standards for Ambulatory Care (2000 Hospital Accreditation Standards, January 2000). The protocol shall include a process reasonably designed to inform patients of their rights and responsibilities. Patients shall be given a copy of their rights and responsibilities upon admission.
D.E. If the Governor has declared a public health emergency related to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), each outpatient surgical hospital shall allow a person with a disability who requires assistance as a result of such disability to be accompanied by a designated support person at any time during which health care services are provided.
1. A designated support person shall not be subject to any restrictions on visitation adopted by such outpatient surgical hospital. However, such designated support person may be required to comply with all reasonable requirements of the outpatient surgical hospital adopted to protect the health and safety of patients and staff of the outpatient surgical hospital.
2. Every outpatient surgical hospital shall establish policies applicable to designated support persons and shall:
a. Make such policies available to the public on a website maintained by the outpatient surgical hospital; and
b. Provide such policies, in writing, to the patient at such time as health care services are provided.
E.F. Each outpatient surgical hospital shall obtain a criminal history record check pursuant to § 32.1-126.02 of the Code of Virginia on any compensated employee not licensed by the Board of Pharmacy whose job duties provide access to controlled substances within the outpatient surgical hospital pharmacy.
