Common use of Supplemental Personal Care Clause in Contracts

Supplemental Personal Care. (3.2): This service is provided to individuals whose needs exceed the maximum amount available under the State Plan or who are temporarily without a provider. This service provides assistance to maintain bodily hygiene, personal safety, and activities of daily living (ADL). These tasks are limited to nonmedical personal services: feeding, bathing, oral hygiene, grooming, dressing, care of and assistance with prosthetic devices, rubbing skin to promote circulation, turning in bed and other types of repositioning, assisting the individual with walking, and moving the individual from place to place (e.g., transferring). Client instruction in self- care may also be provided; may also include assistance with preparation of meals, but does not include the cost of the meals themselves. Purchase of personal care supplies may be covered where there are no other resources and the purchase would create a financial hardship. These items include supplies not covered under the State Plan. When specified in the plan of care, this service may also include such housekeeping chores as bed making, dusting, and vacuuming, which are essential to the health and welfare of the recipient. The household chores which are performed by the worker are essentially ancillary to the provision of the client-centered care. Thus, if food is spilled, it may be cleaned up, and when bed linen is soiled it may be changed, washed, and put away. However, at no time would household chores become the central activity furnished by a personal care worker. When a personal care service is to be performed by an unlicensed health care worker permissible duties will be limited to those allowed by the worker’s employer, or permissible according to the Board of Registered Nursing policy on unlicensed assistive personnel, and as permitted by the individual’s certification, if applicable. Personal care service providers may be paid while the client is institutionalized. This payment is made to retain the services of the care provider and is limited to seven (7) calendar days per institutionalization.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Standard Agreement, Standard Agreement

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Supplemental Personal Care. (3.2): This service is provided to individuals whose needs exceed the maximum amount available under the State Plan or who are temporarily without a provider. This service provides assistance to maintain bodily hygiene, personal safety, and activities of daily living (ADL). These tasks are limited to nonmedical personal services: feeding, bathing, oral hygiene, grooming, dressing, care of and assistance with prosthetic devices, rubbing skin to promote circulation, turning in bed and other types of repositioning, assisting the individual with walking, and moving the individual from place to place (e.g., transferring). Client instruction in self- self care may also be provided; may also include assistance with preparation of meals, but does not include the cost of the meals themselves. Purchase of personal care supplies may be covered where there are no other resources and the purchase would create a financial hardship. These items include supplies not covered under the State Plan. When specified in the plan of care, this service may also include such housekeeping chores as bed making, dusting, and vacuuming, which are essential to the health and welfare of the recipient. The household chores which are performed by the worker are essentially ancillary to the provision of the client-centered care. Thus, if food is spilled, it may be cleaned up, and when bed linen is soiled it may be changed, washed, and put away. However, at no time would household chores become the central activity furnished by a personal care worker. When a personal care service is to be performed by an unlicensed health care worker permissible duties will be limited to those allowed by the worker’s employer, or permissible according to the Board of Registered Nursing policy on unlicensed assistive personnel, and as permitted by the individual’s certification, if applicable. Personal care service providers may be paid while the client is institutionalized. This payment is made to retain the services of the care provider and is limited to seven (7) calendar days per institutionalization.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Standard Agreement, Standard Agreement

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Supplemental Personal Care. (3.2): This service is provided to individuals whose needs exceed the maximum amount available under the State Plan or who are temporarily without a provider. This service provides assistance to maintain bodily hygiene, personal safety, and activities of daily living (ADL). These tasks are limited to nonmedical personal services: feeding, bathing, oral hygiene, grooming, dressing, care of and assistance with prosthetic devices, rubbing skin to promote circulation, turning in bed and other types of repositioning, assisting the individual with walking, and moving the individual from place to place (e.g., transferring). Client Waiver Participant instruction in self- self-care may also be provided; may also include assistance with preparation of meals, but does not include the cost of the meals themselves. Purchase of personal care supplies may be covered where there are no other resources and the purchase would create a financial hardship. These items include supplies not covered under the State Plan. When specified in the plan of care, this service may also include such housekeeping chores as bed making, dusting, and vacuuming, which are essential to the health and welfare of the recipient. The household chores which are performed by the worker are essentially ancillary to the provision of the clientWaiver Participant-centered care. Thus, if food is spilled, it may be cleaned up, and when bed linen is soiled it may be changed, washed, and put away. However, at no time would household chores become the central activity furnished by a personal care worker. When a personal care service is to be performed by an unlicensed health care worker permissible duties will be limited to those allowed by the worker’s employer, or permissible according to the Board of Registered Nursing policy on unlicensed assistive personnel, and as permitted by the individual’s certification, if applicable. Personal care service providers may be paid while the client Waiver Participant is institutionalized. This payment is made to retain the services of the care provider and is limited to seven (7) calendar days per institutionalization.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Standard Agreement

Draft better contracts in just 5 minutes Get the weekly Law Insider newsletter packed with expert videos, webinars, ebooks, and more!