Washington State

House of Representatives

Office of Program Research

BILL

 ANALYSIS

Health Care Committee

 

 

SB 5709

Brief Description: Concerning nursing practices in community-based and in-home care.

 

Sponsors: Senators Deccio, Thibaudeau, Franklin, Winsley and Shin; by request of Department of Social and Health Services and Department of Health.


Brief Summary of Bill

    Allows registered nurses in in-home care settings to delegate nursing care tasks, including the administration of medication and tasks requiring substantial skill, to nursing assistants when the individual patient is in stable and predictable condition.

    Allows registered nurses working for a home health or hospice agency to delegate the application, instillation, or insertion of medications to a nursing assistant under a plan of care.


Hearing Date: 3/25/03


Staff: Chris Blake (786-7392).


Background:


Nursing assistants may either be registered or certified by the Department of Health depending on their education and training. Nursing assistants may assist in providing care to individuals as delegated by and under the supervision of a licensed or registered nurse. Nursing assistants working in community-based settings may also provide certain nursing care tasks upon completing the Department of Social and Health Services' basic core nurse delegation training.


Registered nurses may delegate nursing care tasks that are within the nurse's scope of practice to other individuals where the nurse finds it to be in the patient's best interest. Before delegating a nursing care task, the registered nurse must determine the competency level of the person to perform the delegated task, evaluate the appropriateness of the delegation, and supervise the person performing the delegated task.


With the exception of delegations to nursing assistants working in community-based care settings with patients that are in a stable and predictable condition, registered nurses may not delegate tasks requiring substantial skill; the administration of medications; or piercing or severing tissues. The administration of medications by injection, sterile procedures, and central line maintenance may never be delegated to a nursing assistant in a community-based care setting.


Summary of Bill:


In addition to simple care tasks, registered nurses in in-home care settings may delegate nursing care tasks to nursing assistants but only when the individual patient is in stable and predictable condition and the nurse has determined that the delegation is appropriate. This includes tasks requiring substantial skill and the administration of medications. The administration of medications by injection, sterile procedures, and central line maintenance may not be delegated. In-home care settings include an individual's temporary or permanent place of residence other than an acute care hospital, skilled nursing facility, or community-based care setting.


Registered nurses working for a home health or hospice agency are allowed to delegate the application, instillation, or insertion of medications to a registered or certified nursing assistant under a plan of care.


Nursing assistants may no longer perform delegated tasks requiring the piercing or severing of tissues.


Nursing assistants are allowed to provide personal aide services for an adult with a functional disability under their direction.


The Department of Health must adopt rules regarding policies governing nurse delegation practices for in-home service agencies


Authority for individuals to provide medication assistance is clarified as including in-home care settings. An oral or written communication from an authorized practitioner stating that medication preparation assistance is necessary for a patient must be obtained before an individual may provide medication assistance.


Updates terminology, makes technical changes, and corrects statutory cross-references.


Appropriation: None.


Fiscal Note: Available.


Effective Date: The bill contains an emergency clause and takes effect immediately.