Revised Code of Washington
Chapter 70.128 - Adult Family Homes.
70.128.230 - Long-term caregiver training.

RCW 70.128.230
Long-term caregiver training.

(1) The definitions in this subsection apply throughout this section unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(a) "Caregiver" includes all adult family home resident managers and any person who provides residents with hands-on personal care on behalf of an adult family home, except volunteers who are directly supervised.
(b) "Indirect supervision" means oversight by a person who has demonstrated competency in the core areas or has been fully exempted from the training requirements pursuant to this section and is quickly and easily available to the caregiver, but not necessarily on-site.
(2) Training must have three components: Orientation, basic training, and continuing education. All adult family home providers, resident managers, and employees, or volunteers who routinely interact with residents shall complete orientation. Caregivers shall complete orientation, basic training, and continuing education.
(3) Orientation consists of introductory information on residents' rights, communication skills, fire and life safety, and universal precautions. Orientation must be provided at the facility by appropriate adult family home staff to all adult family home employees before the employees have routine interaction with residents.
(4) Basic training consists of modules on the core knowledge and skills that caregivers need to learn and understand to effectively and safely provide care to residents. Basic training must be outcome-based, and the effectiveness of the basic training must be measured by demonstrated competency in the core areas through the use of a competency test. Basic training must be completed by caregivers within one hundred twenty days of the date on which they begin to provide hands-on care. Until competency in the core areas has been demonstrated, caregivers shall not provide hands-on personal care to residents without direct supervision.
(5) For adult family homes that serve residents with special needs such as dementia, developmental disabilities, or mental illness, specialty training is required of providers and resident managers.
(a) Specialty training consists of modules on the core knowledge and skills that providers and resident managers need to effectively and safely provide care to residents with special needs. Specialty training should be integrated into basic training wherever appropriate. Specialty training must be outcome-based, and the effectiveness of the specialty training measured by demonstrated competency in the core specialty areas through the use of a competency test.
(b) Specialty training must be completed by providers and resident managers before admitting and serving residents who have been determined to have special needs related to mental illness, dementia, or a developmental disability. Should a resident develop special needs while living in a home without specialty designation, the provider and resident manager have one hundred twenty days to complete specialty training.
(6) Continuing education consists of ongoing delivery of information to caregivers on various topics relevant to the care setting and care needs of residents. Competency testing is not required for continuing education. Continuing education is not required in the same calendar year in which basic or modified basic training is successfully completed. Continuing education is required in each calendar year thereafter. If specialty training is completed, the specialty training applies toward any continuing education requirement for up to two years following the completion of the specialty training.
(7) Persons who successfully complete the competency challenge test for basic training are fully exempt from the basic training requirements of this section. Persons who successfully complete the specialty training competency challenge test are fully exempt from the specialty training requirements of this section.
(8)(a) Registered nurses and licensed practical nurses licensed under chapter 18.79 RCW are exempt from any continuing education requirement established under this section.
(b) The department may adopt rules that would exempt licensed persons from all or part of the training requirements under this chapter, if they are (i) performing the tasks for which they are licensed and (ii) subject to chapter 18.130 RCW.
(9) In an effort to improve access to training and education and reduce costs, especially for rural communities, the adult family home training network must include the use of innovative types of learning strategies such as internet resources, videotapes, and distance learning using satellite technology coordinated through community colleges, private associations, or other entities, as defined by the department.
(10) The adult family home training network shall assist adult family homes that desire to deliver facility-based training with facility designated trainers, or adult family homes that desire to pool their resources to create shared training systems. The department shall develop criteria for reviewing and approving trainers and training materials. The department may approve a curriculum based upon attestation by an adult family home administrator that the adult family home's training curriculum addresses basic and specialty training competencies identified by the department, and shall review a curriculum to verify that it meets these requirements. The department may conduct the review as part of the next regularly scheduled inspection authorized under RCW 70.128.070. The department shall rescind approval of any curriculum if it determines that the curriculum does not meet these requirements.
(11) The department shall adopt rules by September 1, 2002, for the implementation of this section.
(12)(a) Except as provided in (b) of this subsection, the orientation, basic training, specialty training, and continuing education requirements of this section commence September 1, 2002, and shall be applied to (i) employees hired subsequent to September 1, 2002; or (ii) existing employees that on September 1, 2002, have not successfully completed the training requirements under RCW 70.128.120 or 70.128.130 and this section. Existing employees who have not successfully completed the training requirements under RCW 70.128.120 or 70.128.130 shall be subject to all applicable requirements of this section.
(b) Beginning January 7, 2012, long-term care workers, as defined in RCW 74.39A.009, employed by an adult family home are also subject to the training requirements under RCW 74.39A.074.
(13) If a pandemic, natural disaster, or other declared state of emergency makes specialty training unavailable, the department may adopt rules to allow an adult family home where the provider and resident manager have not completed specialty training to admit a resident or residents with special needs related to mental illness, dementia, or a developmental disability, or to care for a resident or residents already living in the home who develop special needs. Such rules must include information about how to complete the specialty training once the training is available.
(a) Rules adopted under this subsection (13) are effective until the termination of the pandemic, natural disaster, or other declared state of emergency or until the department determines that providers and resident managers who were unable to complete the specialty training required in subsection (5)(b) of this section have had adequate access to complete the required training, whichever is later. Once the department determines a rule adopted under this subsection (13) is no longer necessary, it must repeal the rule under RCW 34.05.353.
(b) Within 12 months of the termination of the pandemic, natural disaster, or other declared state of emergency, the department shall conduct a review of training compliance with subsection (5)(b) of this section and provide the legislature with a report.

[ 2021 c 203 § 11; 2019 c 466 § 5; 2013 c 259 § 5; 2012 c 164 § 705; 2002 c 233 § 3; 2000 c 121 § 3.]
NOTES:

Effective date—Retroactive application—2021 c 203: See notes following RCW 43.43.832.


Finding—Intent—Rules—Effective date—2012 c 164: See notes following RCW 18.88B.010.


Effective date—2002 c 233: See note following RCW 18.20.270.

Structure Revised Code of Washington

Revised Code of Washington

Title 70 - Public Health and Safety

Chapter 70.128 - Adult Family Homes.

70.128.005 - Findings—Intent.

70.128.007 - Purpose.

70.128.010 - Definitions.

70.128.030 - Exemptions.

70.128.040 - Adoption of rules and standards—Negotiated rule making—Specialty license.

70.128.043 - Negotiated rule making—Statewide unit of licensees—Intent.

70.128.050 - License—Required as of July 1, 1990—Limitations.

70.128.055 - Operating without a license—Misdemeanor.

70.128.057 - Operating without a license—Injunction or civil penalty.

70.128.058 - Operating without a license—Application of consumer protection act.

70.128.060 - License—Generally—Fees.

70.128.064 - Priority processing for license applications—Provisional license.

70.128.065 - Multiple facility operators—Requirements—Licensure of additional homes.

70.128.066 - Seven or eight bed adult family homes—Requirements—Licensure.

70.128.070 - License—Inspections—Correction of violations.

70.128.080 - License and inspection report—Availability for review.

70.128.090 - Inspections—Generally.

70.128.100 - Immediate suspension of license when conditions warrant.

70.128.105 - Injunction if conditions warrant.

70.128.110 - Prohibition against recommending unlicensed home—Report and investigation of unlicensed home.

70.128.120 - Adult family home provider, applicant, resident manager—Minimum qualifications.

70.128.122 - Adult family homes licensed by Indian tribes.

70.128.125 - Resident rights.

70.128.130 - Adult family homes—Requirements.

70.128.135 - Compliance with chapter 70.24 RCW.

70.128.140 - Compliance with local codes and state and local fire safety regulations.

70.128.150 - Adult family homes to work with local quality assurance projects—Interference with representative of ombuds program—Penalty.

70.128.155 - Resident contact information—Department requirements and duties.

70.128.160 - Department authority to take actions in response to noncompliance or violations—Civil penalties—Adult family home account.

70.128.163 - Temporary management program—Purposes—Voluntary participation—Temporary management duties, duration—Rules.

70.128.167 - Disputed violations, enforcement remedies—Informal dispute resolution process.

70.128.170 - Homes relying on prayer for healing—Application of chapter.

70.128.200 - Toll-free telephone number for complaints—Discrimination or retaliation prohibited.

70.128.210 - Training standards review—Delivery system—Issues reviewed—Report to the legislature.

70.128.220 - Elder care—Professionalization of providers.

70.128.230 - Long-term caregiver training.

70.128.240 - Approval system—Department-approved training—Adoption of rules.

70.128.250 - Required training and continuing education—Food safety training and testing.

70.128.260 - Limitation on restrictive covenants.

70.128.270 - Legislative intent—Enacting recommendations included in the adult family home quality assurance panel report.

70.128.280 - Required disclosure—Forms—Decrease in scope of care, services, activities—Notice—Increased needs of a resident—Denial of admission to a prospective resident—Department website.

70.128.290 - Correction of a violation or deficiency—Not included in a home's report—Criteria.

70.128.300 - Services for adult family home residents with a primary need of care related to a developmental or intellectual disability—Services for residents of adult family homes dedicated solely to dementia care—Design and implementation—Recommend...

70.128.305 - Adult family home training network—Requirements.

70.128.306 - Stop placement orders and limited stop placement orders.

70.128.901 - Construction—Chapter applicable to state registered domestic partnerships—2009 c 521.