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Current as of January 01, 2024 | Updated by FindLaw Staff
A nursing home is not eligible to receive medical assistance payments unless it refrains from all of the following:
1. Charging private-paying residents rates for similar services which exceed those rates which are approved by the department for medical assistance recipients, as determined by the prospective desk audit rate, except under the following circumstances: the nursing home may charge private-paying residents a higher rate for a private room and charge for special services which are not included in the daily rate if medical assistance residents are charged separately at the same rate for the same services in addition to the daily rate paid by the department. Services covered by the payment rate must be the same regardless of payment source. Special services, if offered, must be offered to all residents and charged separately at the same rate. Residents are free to select or decline special services. Special services must not include services which must be provided by the nursing home in order to comply with licensure or certification standards and that if not provided would result in a deficiency or violation by the nursing home. Services beyond those required to comply with licensure or certification standards must not be charged separately as a special service if they were included in the payment rate for the previous reporting year. A nursing home that charges a private-paying resident a rate in violation of this chapter is subject to an action by the state or any of its subdivisions or agencies for civil damages. A private-paying resident or the resident's legal representative has a cause of action for civil damages against a nursing home that charges the resident rates in violation of this chapter. The damages awarded shall include three times the payments that result from the violation, together with costs and disbursements, including reasonable attorney's fees or their equivalent.
2. Requiring an applicant for admission to the home, or the guardian or conservator of the applicant, as a condition of admission, to pay any fee or deposit, loan any money to the nursing home, or promise to leave all or part of the applicant's estate to the home.
3. Requiring any resident of the nursing home to utilize a vendor of health care services who is a licensed physician or pharmacist chosen by the nursing home.
4. Providing differential treatment on the basis of status with regard to public assistance.
5. Discriminating in admissions, services offered, or room assignment on the basis of status with regard to public assistance. Admissions discrimination shall include, but is not limited to:
a. Basing admissions decisions upon assurance by the applicant to the nursing home, or the applicant's guardian or conservator, that the applicant is neither eligible for nor will seek public assistance for payment of nursing home care costs.
b. Engaging in preferential selection from waiting lists based on an applicant's ability to pay privately.
The collection and use by a nursing home of financial information of any applicant pursuant to a preadmission screening program does not raise an inference that the nursing home is utilizing that information for any purpose prohibited by this chapter.
6. Requiring any vendor of medical care, who is reimbursed by medical assistance under a separate fee schedule, to pay any portion of the vendor's fee to the nursing home except as payment for the fair market value of renting or leasing space or equipment of the nursing home or purchasing support services, if those agreements are disclosed to the department.
7. Refusing, for more than twenty-four hours, to accept a resident returning to the resident's same bed or a bed certified for the same level of care, in accordance with a physician's order authorizing transfer, after receiving inpatient hospital services.
8. Violating any of the rights of health care facility residents enumerated in section 50-10.2-02.
9. Charging a managed care organization a rate that is less than the rate approved by the department for a medical assistance recipient in the same classification.
Cite this article: FindLaw.com - North Dakota Century Code Title 50. Public Welfare § 50-24.4-19. Prohibited practices - last updated January 01, 2024 | https://codes.findlaw.com/nd/title-50-public-welfare/nd-cent-code-sect-50-24-4-19/
FindLaw Codes may not reflect the most recent version of the law in your jurisdiction. Please verify the status of the code you are researching with the state legislature or via Westlaw before relying on it for your legal needs.
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