Bill

Bill > A4040


NJ A4040

NJ A4040
Requires long-term care facilities to develop person-centered care plans for residents and establishes right to certain forms of visitation for long-term care residents.


summary

Introduced
03/07/2024
In Committee
03/07/2024
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/12/2026

Introduced Session

2024-2025 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill regulates visitation for long-term care residents. The bill defines "essential caregiver" to mean a person selected by a resident of a long-term care facility, or by the resident's guardian or legal representative, which person will have the right of access to and the right to visit with the resident during a state of emergency or an outbreak, epidemic, or pandemic of an infectious disease. An essential caregiver may be, but shall not be limited to, a family member, friend, or guardian of the resident, a person who is qualified to administer moral, religious, or spiritual guidance, or any other person the resident or resident's legal representative designates. There are not to be any requirements or criteria for the designation of an essential caregiver. Under the bill, a long-term care facility is to permit a resident or resident's guardian or legal representative to designate at least two essential caregivers, who are to be authorized to visit in person with the resident during any declared emergency or during an outbreak, epidemic, or pandemic of an infectious disease affecting or likely to affect a long-term care facility. The designated essential caregivers are to be documented in the resident's plan of care. Essential caregiver visits are to be for periods of time that are at least equal to the time afforded by federal and State law to residents of long-term care facilities for in-person visitation under normal circumstances. Under the bill, the following information is to be posted on the Internet website of each long-term care facility, and is to be transmitted by each long-term care facility, in writing, to residents or residents' guardians or legal representatives: the rights of residents to designate at least two essential caregivers in the event of a declared emergency or during an outbreak, epidemic, or a pandemic of an infectious disease affecting or likely to affect a long-term care facility; the process by which essential caregivers may be designated; and any associated requirements. The bill provides that a long-term care facility may require an essential caregiver to agree in writing to the long-term care facility's visitation policies and procedures. A long-term care facility may restrict or revoke visitation for an essential caregiver who violates the long-term care facility's visitation policies and procedures. An essential caregiver, who acts in accordance with the long-term care facility's visitation policies and procedures, is not to have visitation restricted or revoked. In addition, a long-term care facility is not to impose on essential caregivers any protocols that are stricter than the infection control and prevention protocols that are imposed on the facility's employees. Under the bill, the Department of Health is to take such actions as are necessary to identify, investigate, and ensure long-term care facilities are in compliance with the bill's provisions. It is the sponsor's belief that this bill is necessary to protect long-term care residents, as visitation restrictions imposed during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in social isolation and other detrimental effects on the health and well-being of long-term care residents.

AI Summary

This bill regulates visitation for long-term care residents. It allows residents or their legal representatives to designate at least two "essential caregivers" who have the right to visit the resident in person during a declared emergency or an outbreak, epidemic, or pandemic of an infectious disease. The bill outlines requirements for long-term care facilities, such as documenting essential caregivers in the resident's plan of care, providing equal visitation time as normal, and not imposing stricter protocols on essential caregivers than on facility employees. The Department of Health is tasked with ensuring compliance with the bill's provisions, which aim to protect long-term care residents from the detrimental effects of social isolation experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Committee Categories

Health and Social Services

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Aging and Human Services Committee (on 03/07/2024)

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