71-477. Rural emergency hospital; license; eligibility; application; operation; requirements; original license; inactive.
283 words·~1 min read·
/ne/chapter-71/71-477A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
(1)A facility shall be eligible to apply for a license as a rural emergency hospital if such facility is:
(a)Licensed as a critical access hospital;
(b)Licensed as a general hospital with not more than fifty licensed beds located in a county in a rural area as defined in section 1886(d)(2)(D) of the federal Social Security Act; or
(c)Licensed as a general hospital with not more than fifty licensed beds that is deemed as being located in a rural area pursuant to section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the federal Social Security Act.
(2)A facility applying for licensure as a rural emergency hospital shall include with the application:
(a)An action plan for initiating rural emergency hospital services, including a detailed transition plan that lists the specific services that the facility will retain, modify, add, and discontinue;
(b)A description of services that the facility intends to provide on an outpatient basis; and
(c)Such other information as required by rules and regulations adopted and promulgated by the department.
(3)A rural emergency hospital shall not have inpatient beds, except that such hospital may have a unit that is a distinct part of such hospital and that is licensed as a skilled nursing facility to provide post-hospital extended care services.
(4)A rural emergency hospital may own and operate an entity that provides ambulance services.
(5)A licensed general hospital or critical access hospital that applies for and receives licensure as a rural emergency hospital and elects to operate as a rural emergency hospital shall retain its original license as a general hospital or critical access hospital. Such original license shall remain inactive while the rural emergency hospital license is in effect.