Title: New Jersey Nurse Delegation Pilot Program
1New Jersey Nurse Delegation Pilot Program
- William A. B. Ditto
- Director
- Division of Disability Services
- New Jersey Department of Human Services
2Overview of Presentation
- Why Pursue Nurse Delegation in Home Care?
- What is the Status of Nurse Delegation in NJ?
- The Nurse Delegation Process
- Design of the NJ Pilot Delegation Program
Theres No Place Like Home - Some Early Findings
3Why Did NJ Pursue This?
- Demographics
- Economics
- Support to unpaid Family Caregivers
- Better use of professional nursing personnel in
home care agencies - Patient Safety
- Acknowledge home health aide skills talents
4Why Did NJ Undertake this Project?
- Individuals are in nursing facilities who want to
be in the community or with family - Families find that home care aides cannot provide
the type of service they need to maintain loved
ones at home - There is a shortage of licensed nursing personnel
- Demand for home care will escalate dramatically
as the boomers begin needing LTC services - It has been effective in other states
- NJ must address its Olmstead obligation
5Why Did NJ Undertake this Project? (continued)
- Family caregivers burn out or risk loss of
employment because of care giving and need to
perform skilled tasks - We are not making full use of the skills,
knowledge and talent of registered professional
nurses who work in the Medicaid PCA program - We know (but never acknowledge) that aides are
performing skilled tasks without nursing
oversight or supervision
6Nurse Delegation in New Jersey
- In New Jersey, after assessing a consumers
condition and the competencies of unlicensed
assistive personnel, nurses may delegate
selected nursing tasks to unlicensed persons. - There are no specific restrictions on the tasks
that may be delegated, provided the task does not
require the knowledge and judgment of a nurse . - Source NJAC 1337-6.2 (State Board of Nursing
Regulations)
7Restrictions on Delegation to Certified Home
Health Aides in NJ
- Current rules regarding certified home health
aides (CHHA) prohibit them from administering
medications (NJAC 1337-14.3) - This prevents nurses from delegating this task to
CHHAs because the aide cannot accept the
delegation. - (Nurses can delegate this task to other
Unlicensed Assistive Personnel (UAP) at present
in other care environments, e.g.. hospital,
assisted living facility.)
8Exemption for Delegation in New Jerseys Pilot
Granted
- The State Board of Nursing issued a letter of
support on October 22, 2008 allowing medication
administration by CHHAS within the parameters of
the pilot to help inform regulatory changes by
the Board of Nursing in the future.
9Delegation Dealing with Issues
- Issues that can be barriers to delegation
- Process of delegationclarified in rule with
forms provided so that nurses know they have
documented needed items. - Liability issueslanguage protecting nurses from
situations where aides do not follow their
instructions. - Authority of nurse only to delegatenurses,
rather than their employers, retain the authority
to decide where delegation is appropriate.
10Pilot Drivers
- Home care agencies indicated that providing
intermittent skilled care several times a day
by licensed nurses is not practical or realistic
in the current environment - Skilled nursing care at home identified as a
crucial element for facilitating
deinstitutionalization, by NJ Olmstead
Stakeholder Task Force (2001) - NJ had a federal Real Choice Systems Change
Grant and could use funds to explore Nurse
Delegation as an innovative practice - Consumers wanted to stay at home with care
11A Review of the Delegation Process
- PCA Pilot agency nurses, who have been oriented,
review new referrals and current caseloads and
determine which consumers would benefit from
delegated services - The decision to delegate or not and to rescind
delegation is the sole responsibility of the
nurse based on his/her professional judgment. - The RN uses triad model of delegation -- one
nurse delegates tasks to one aide for one
consumer. Task competency of the CHHA is not
transferable from one consumer to another, even
if the nurse and aide are the same for other
consumers. Must be patient specific. Each
skilled task requires an individual delegation.
12A Review of the Delegation Process
- The RN has the right to refuse to delegate tasks
of nursing care if he/she believes it would be
unsafe or inappropriate to delegate or he/she is
unable to provide adequate supervision. - Decisions relative the frequency of supervision
and reinforcement of the performance of delegated
tasks is the domain of the front line
(delegating) nurse.
13Nurse Delegation PilotResearch Development
Phase
- Series of Meetings Forums with Board of
Nursing, Consumers, Home Care Agencies
Associations, CHHAs and Insurance Carriers - Review of Similar Projects in Other States and
Research Findings - Under contract to the Division, Rutgers
University designed a model pilot program for
Nurse Delegation in NJ - Pilot Evaluation Component also was developed by
Rutgers University (Center for State Health
Policy)
14Nurse Delegation Pilot Study Population
- Study population consists of individuals eligible
for Medicaid personal care assistant (PCA)
services - Does not impact on (or negate) the receipt of any
other Medicaid services - Intended to address the needs of individuals with
relatively stable conditions who require ongoing
PCA service in the community - PCA recipients may have their authorized hours
increased when they enter delegation pilot to
account for aide training or expanded service
15NJ NURSE DELEGATION PILOT Design Features
- Board of Nursing agreed to allow medication
administration by Certified Home Health Aides for
duration of the pilot - DDS/DHS selected 21 Home Care Companies with 49
locations to participate in the pilot on a
voluntary basis - Target is to have 200-300 individuals who will
receive nurse delegated services over 2-3 year
period - Participation is VOLUNTARY for everyone
16NJ Nurse Delegation PilotDesign Features
(continued)
- Delegating nurses (and agency administrators)
have been oriented about the process of
delegation, using the State Board of Nursing
Delegation Algorithm - Agency field nurses identify potential
participants in their caseloads - The Division works with the Community Choice
Counselors, at the NJ Department of Health
Senior Services, to identify individuals
presently in nursing facilities who could
transition out if delegated services are made
available
17NJ Nurse Delegation PilotDesign Features
(continued)
- Home care agencys delegating nurses have the
final say in all matters related to delegation - Participants, agencies and nurses are asked to
cooperate with researchers in both allowing
interviews and providing data. - A unique Medicaid PCA procedure code and rate
have been developed to cover the cost of the
nurse delegation service. As mentioned the
recipients authorized hours may be increased
temporarily for training or longer term because a
new task has been added for the aide (ongoing)
18Delegation for Participants Currently in Nursing
Facilities
- Department of Health Senior Services (DHSS)
staff identify, with NF staff, potential
candidates who wish to live in the community and
are appropriate for the Pilot study during
discharge planning sessions. - Using the list of participating Pilot PCA
agencies, DHSS staff invite a local PCA agency to
attend a meeting with the potential participant,
family and other advocates to review the efficacy
of delegation services when discharged. - Pilot staff have also conducted training sessions
with discharge planners in hospitals and nursing
facilities to make them aware of the expanded
service.
19NJ Pilot Program Oversight Reporting
- An Advisory Council, made up of a cross section
of stakeholders, is in place to provide advice
and assist with problem solving. The Advisory
Council meets 2-3 times per year. As the needs
of the management team change over the life of
the pilot, so does the membership of the Advisory
Council. - Periodic updates are issued to keep the home care
industry, not involved in the pilot, informed of
the progress and outcomes of the pilot. - A bi-monthly report is being generated for the
Board of Nursing
20Funding
- The Division applied for and received multi-year
funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
(RWJF) to operate the pilot for a 36 month
period. - RWJF funds are matched with Title XIX (Medicaid)
funding to provide adequate resources. - Discussions with the Assistant Secretary for
Evaluation Planning (ASPE) at federal DHHS
resulted in additional funding being provided for
the evaluation of cost effectiveness by
Mathematica Policy Research of Princeton
21Some Early Findings in NJ
- 21 Home Care companies participating with 44
sites - 186 registered nurses completed the orientation
program - 210 individual Medicaid clients have received
delegated services - 150 patients are active in the program as of
February
22Some Early Findings in NJ
- Medication administration is the most requested
service (February 2010) - 132 medication administration delegations
- 106 Oral
- 9 Injectable
- 9 Topical
- 6 Other Routes
- 24 Blood Glucose Monitoring
23Some Early Findings in NJ
- Other Delegated Tasks (25)
- Gastronomy Tube Feeds
- Catheterization, bladder bowel programs
- Wound Care
- Insulin pre fill
- Cough assist
24Long Range Goals
- Add options for individuals to remain at home
in the community or to leave a nursing facility. - Address the Olmstead decision mandates.
- Inform changes in the State Board of Nursing
Regulations to support delegated medication
administration by home health aides. - Make better use of existing home care provider
agency services.
25For further information
- Contact
- Susan Brennan McDermott, RN
- Project Manager
- NJ Nurse Delegation Pilot
- 609 292-1268
- Susan.Brennan-McDermott_at_dhs.state.nj.us