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Code · Wisconsin · Chapter 51 — State alcohol, drug abuse, developmental disabilities and mental health act

51.036 Crisis urgent care and observation facilities.

1,329 words·~6 min read·/wi/chapter-51/51-036-3

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51.036 Crisis urgent care and observation facilities.
(1)Definitions. In this section:
(a)“Crisis” means a situation caused by an individual’s apparent mental or substance use disorder that results in a high level of stress or anxiety for the individual, persons providing care for the individual, or the public and that is not resolved by the available coping methods of the individual or by the efforts of those providing ordinary care or support for the individual.
(b)“Crisis urgent care and observation facility” means a treatment facility that admits an individual to prevent, de-escalate, or treat the individual’s mental health or substance use disorder and includes the necessary structure and staff to support the individual’s needs relating to the mental health or substance use disorder.
(2)Certification required; exemption; grants.
(a)The department shall establish a certification process for crisis urgent care and observation facilities and a grant program to award grants to develop and support crisis urgent care and observation facilities. No person may operate a crisis urgent care and observation facility without a certification from the department. The department may make announced and unannounced inspections and complaint investigations of crisis urgent care and observation facilities as it deems necessary, at reasonable times and in a reasonable manner. The department may limit the number of certifications it grants to operate crisis urgent care and observation facilities. The department shall, using the department’s division of the state into regions by county, include statewide geographic consideration in its evaluation of applications for certification under this section to ensure geographic diversity among the regions in the location of crisis urgent care and observation facilities certified under this section.
1. A crisis urgent care and observation facility certified under this section is not subject to facility regulation under ch. 50 , unless otherwise required due to the facility’s licensure or certification for other services or purposes. A crisis urgent care and observation facility is not a hospital subject to approval under ss. 50.32 to 50.39 and nothing in this subsection limits services a hospital may provide under ch. 50 .
2. Notwithstanding par.
(d), the department shall promote certification and encourage any facility that is licensed as a hospital under ch. 50 and provides services consistent with those described in par.
(c)1. to 9. to apply for certification under this section. The requirements under this section may not be construed to prohibit, limit, or otherwise interfere with services provided by a county or a hospital or other facility that are provided consistent with the facility’s existing licensure or certification, whether the facility is publicly or privately funded.
3. Notwithstanding s. 150.93 , any hospital that expands psychiatric bed capacity to accommodate admissions under this section may increase its approved bed capacity by the number of psychiatric beds added under this subdivision.
4. The department shall take into account the geography of hospital facilities granted certification under subd. 2. when considering certification applications for other crisis urgent care and observation facilities.
(c)Subject to par.
(d), the department may grant a certification to a crisis urgent care and observation facility that specifies in an application the level of care the facility can provide to patients and demonstrates in the application its ability to do all of the following:
1. Accept referrals for crisis services for adults and, if applicable, for youth, including any of the following:
a. Involuntary patients brought under s. 51.15 .
b. Voluntary patients for services arriving as walk-ins or brought by law enforcement, emergency medical responders or emergency medical services practitioners, or county crisis personnel.
2. Abstain from having a requirement for medical clearance before admission assessment.
3. Provide assessments for physical health, substance use disorder, and mental health.
4. Provide screening for suicide and violence risk.
5. Provide medication management and therapeutic counseling.
6. Provide coordination of services for basic needs.
7. Provide for the safety and security of both the staff and the patients.
8. Have adequate staffing 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, including through use of telehealth, as described under s. 49.45
(61), with a multidisciplinary team that includes, as needed, psychiatrists or psychiatric nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurses, licensed clinicians capable of completing assessments, peers with lived experience, and other appropriate staff.
9. Allow for voluntary and involuntary treatment of individuals in crisis as a means to avoid unnecessary placement of those individuals in hospital inpatient beds and allow for an effective conversion to voluntary stabilization when warranted in the same setting.
10. Contribute, from at least one nonstate, federal, or 3rd-party revenue source, an amount, as determined by the department, in addition to any grant awarded by the department under this section.
(d)Before the department may grant certification to a facility under this section, the department shall submit the proposal for certification to the joint committee on finance for approval. If the cochairpersons of the joint committee on finance do not notify the department within 14 working days after the date of the submittal under this paragraph that the committee has scheduled a meeting for the purpose of reviewing the proposal, the department may grant certification of that facility as described in the proposal. If, within 14 working days after the date of the submittal under this paragraph, the cochairpersons of the committee notify the department that the committee has scheduled a meeting for the purpose of reviewing the proposal, the department may grant certification of that facility only upon approval by the committee. When submitting a proposal regarding certification of a facility under this paragraph, the department shall provide the joint committee on finance with all of the following information about the facility proposed for certification:
1. The department’s rationale for selecting the facility.
2. Where the facility is to be located.
3. A specific description of the entity that will be awarded certification.
4. A description of how the funding for the facility will work.
5. The timeline of the facility for accepting patients.
6. The distance from the facility to the nearest hospital.
7. A description of the facility’s plan for staffing, including staff on call.
8. The number of beds in the facility.
9. A description of the facility’s admission, hold, and discharge policies.
10. Security considerations for patients and staff at the facility.
11. The estimated population to be served.
12. The estimated number of diversions from the Winnebago Mental Health Institute had the facility been operating the past 5 years.
13. Policies that ensure the facility has the capacity to assess physical health needs and deliver care for most minor physical health challenges, while also having an identified process in order to transfer an individual to a facility with more medically staffed services if needed.
(e)No later than June 30 of each year, beginning by June 30, 2025, the department shall submit to the joint committee on finance and to the chief clerk of each house of the legislature, for distribution to the appropriate standing committees under s. 13.172
(3), a report regarding crisis urgent care and observation facilities under this section, including information relating to all of the following:
1. Applications for certification received by the department.
2. The number of admissions, including both voluntary and involuntary admissions.
3. Data regarding how patients are arriving for admission, including through transport by law enforcement, family, emergency medical responders or emergency medical services practitioners, or county crisis personnel.
4. Average wait times, including for admission, treatment, discharge, and any other significant aspect of services provided by a crisis urgent care and observation facility.
5. The length of patient stays.
6. The time of day patients are admitted.
7. The source of payments for patient care, including private payment sources or payment under the Medical Assistance program under subch. IV of ch. 49 .
8. Data regarding the county of residence for each patient in counties for which the county’s data is equal to or greater than 20 patients.
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