California 2019-2020 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB506 Compare Versions

OldNewDifferences
1-Enrolled September 17, 2019 Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019 Passed IN Assembly September 12, 2019 Amended IN Senate September 06, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 08, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 506Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 13, 2019 An act to amend Sections 1423, 1424, and 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to health facilities. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 506, Kalra. Long-term health facilities.The Long-Term Care, Health, Safety, and Security Act of 1973 generally provides for the licensure and regulation of long-term health care facilities by the State Department of Public Health and establishes an inspection and reporting system to ensure that long-term health care facilities are in compliance with state statutes and regulations. The term long-term health care facility includes, among other types of facilities, a skilled nursing facility and intermediate care facility.The act defines a class A violation as a violation that the department determines presents either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. The act defines a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a direct proximate cause of death of a patient or resident of the facility. The act defines a class B violation as a violation that the department determines has a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility patients or residents, other than class AA or A violations. Class B violations are also, unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in specified regulations that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient. The act requires the department to prove specific elements to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including the element that death resulted from an occurrence of a nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.This bill would redefine a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility and would modify the elements the department is required to prove in an action to enforce a citation for a class AA violation. The bill would increase the civil penalties for a class A, AA, or B violation by a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility, as specified. The bill would delete numerous references to the patients of a long-term health care facility.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1423 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1423. (a) If upon inspection or investigation the director determines that a nursing facility is in violation of any state or federal law or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, or determines that any other long-term health care facility is in violation of any statutory provision or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, the director shall promptly, but not later than 24 hours, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and holidays, after the director determines or has reasonable cause to determine that an alleged violation has occurred, issue a notice to correct the violation and of intent to issue a citation to the licensee. Before completing the investigation and making the final determination whether to issue a citation, the department shall hold an exit conference with the licensee to identify the potential for issuing a citation for any violation, discuss investigative findings, and allow the licensee to provide the department with additional information related to the violation. The department shall consider this additional information, in conjunction with information from the inspection or investigation, in determining whether to issue a citation, or whether other action would be appropriate. If the department determines that the violation warrants the issuing of a citation and an exit conference has been completed it shall do either of the following:(1) Recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy or remedies on a nursing facility in accordance with federal law; or(2) (A) Issue a citation pursuant to state licensing laws, and if the facility is a nursing facility, may recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy.(B) A state citation shall be served upon the licensee within 30 days after completion of the investigation. Service shall be effected either personally or by registered or certified mail. A copy of the citation shall also be sent to each complainant. Each citation shall be in writing and shall describe with particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the statutory provision, standard, rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, the particular place or area of the facility in which the violation occurred, as well as the amount of any proposed assessment of a civil penalty. The name of any patient jeopardized by the alleged violation shall not be specified in the citation in order to protect the privacy of the patient. However, at the time the licensee is served with the citation, the licensee shall also be served with a written list of each of the names of the patients alleged to have been jeopardized by the violation, which shall not be subject to disclosure as a public record. The citation shall fix the earliest feasible time for the elimination of the condition constituting the alleged violation, when appropriate.(b) When no harm to patients, residents, or guests has occurred, a single incident, event, or occurrence shall result in no more than one citation for each statute or regulation violated.(c) A citation shall not be issued for a violation that has been reported by the licensee to the department, or its designee, as an unusual occurrence, if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The violation has not caused harm to any patient, resident, or guest, or significantly contributed thereto.(2) The licensee has promptly taken reasonable measures to correct the violation and to prevent a recurrence.(3) The unusual occurrence report was the first source of information reported to the department, or its designee, regarding the violation.SEC. 2. Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.SEC. 3. Section 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
1+Amended IN Senate September 06, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 08, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 506Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 13, 2019 An act to amend Sections 1423, 1424, and 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to health facilities. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 506, as amended, Kalra. Long-term health facilities.The Long-Term Care, Health, Safety, and Security Act of 1973 generally provides for the licensure and regulation of long-term health care facilities by the State Department of Public Health and establishes an inspection and reporting system to ensure that long-term health care facilities are in compliance with state statutes and regulations. The term long-term health care facility includes, among other types of facilities, a skilled nursing facility and intermediate care facility.The act defines a class A violation as a violation that the department determines presents either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. The act defines a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a direct proximate cause of death of a patient or resident of the facility. The act defines a class B violation as a violation that the department determines has a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility patients or residents, other than class AA or A violations. Class B violations are also, unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in specified regulations that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient. The act requires the department to prove specific elements to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including the element that death resulted from an occurrence of a nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.This bill would redefine a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. The bill facility and would modify the elements the department is required to prove in an action to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including, among other changes, to prove that the facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation. violation. The bill would increase the civil penalties for a class A, AA, or B violation by a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility, as specified. The bill would delete numerous references to the patients of a long-term health care facility.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1423 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1423. (a) If upon inspection or investigation the director determines that a nursing facility is in violation of any state or federal law or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, or determines that any other long-term health care facility is in violation of any statutory provision or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, the director shall promptly, but not later than 24 hours, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and holidays, after the director determines or has reasonable cause to determine that an alleged violation has occurred, issue a notice to correct the violation and of intent to issue a citation to the licensee. Before completing the investigation and making the final determination whether to issue a citation, the department shall hold an exit conference with the licensee to identify the potential for issuing a citation for any violation, discuss investigative findings, and allow the licensee to provide the department with additional information related to the violation. The department shall consider this additional information, in conjunction with information from the inspection or investigation, in determining whether to issue a citation, or whether other action would be appropriate. If the department determines that the violation warrants the issuing of a citation and an exit conference has been completed it shall do either of the following:(1) Recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy or remedies on a nursing facility in accordance with federal law; or(2) (A) Issue a citation pursuant to state licensing laws, and if the facility is a nursing facility, may recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy.(B) A state citation shall be served upon the licensee within 30 days after completion of the investigation. Service shall be effected either personally or by registered or certified mail. A copy of the citation shall also be sent to each complainant. Each citation shall be in writing and shall describe with particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the statutory provision, standard, rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, the particular place or area of the facility in which the violation occurred, as well as the amount of any proposed assessment of a civil penalty. The name of any patient jeopardized by the alleged violation shall not be specified in the citation in order to protect the privacy of the patient. However, at the time the licensee is served with the citation, the licensee shall also be served with a written list of each of the names of the patients alleged to have been jeopardized by the violation, which shall not be subject to disclosure as a public record. The citation shall fix the earliest feasible time for the elimination of the condition constituting the alleged violation, when appropriate.(b) When no harm to patients, residents, or guests has occurred, a single incident, event, or occurrence shall result in no more than one citation for each statute or regulation violated.(c) A citation shall not be issued for a violation that has been reported by the licensee to the department, or its designee, as an unusual occurrence, if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The violation has not caused harm to any patient, resident, or guest, or significantly contributed thereto.(2) The licensee has promptly taken reasonable measures to correct the violation and to prevent a recurrence.(3) The unusual occurrence report was the first source of information reported to the department, or its designee, regarding the violation.SEC. 2. Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The violation death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.SEC. 3. Section 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that was originally issued as a class AA citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident, but was subsequently reduced to a class A citation, resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
22
3- Enrolled September 17, 2019 Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019 Passed IN Assembly September 12, 2019 Amended IN Senate September 06, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 08, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 506Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 13, 2019 An act to amend Sections 1423, 1424, and 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to health facilities. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 506, Kalra. Long-term health facilities.The Long-Term Care, Health, Safety, and Security Act of 1973 generally provides for the licensure and regulation of long-term health care facilities by the State Department of Public Health and establishes an inspection and reporting system to ensure that long-term health care facilities are in compliance with state statutes and regulations. The term long-term health care facility includes, among other types of facilities, a skilled nursing facility and intermediate care facility.The act defines a class A violation as a violation that the department determines presents either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. The act defines a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a direct proximate cause of death of a patient or resident of the facility. The act defines a class B violation as a violation that the department determines has a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility patients or residents, other than class AA or A violations. Class B violations are also, unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in specified regulations that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient. The act requires the department to prove specific elements to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including the element that death resulted from an occurrence of a nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.This bill would redefine a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility and would modify the elements the department is required to prove in an action to enforce a citation for a class AA violation. The bill would increase the civil penalties for a class A, AA, or B violation by a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility, as specified. The bill would delete numerous references to the patients of a long-term health care facility.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate September 06, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 08, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 506Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 13, 2019 An act to amend Sections 1423, 1424, and 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to health facilities. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 506, as amended, Kalra. Long-term health facilities.The Long-Term Care, Health, Safety, and Security Act of 1973 generally provides for the licensure and regulation of long-term health care facilities by the State Department of Public Health and establishes an inspection and reporting system to ensure that long-term health care facilities are in compliance with state statutes and regulations. The term long-term health care facility includes, among other types of facilities, a skilled nursing facility and intermediate care facility.The act defines a class A violation as a violation that the department determines presents either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. The act defines a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a direct proximate cause of death of a patient or resident of the facility. The act defines a class B violation as a violation that the department determines has a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility patients or residents, other than class AA or A violations. Class B violations are also, unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in specified regulations that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient. The act requires the department to prove specific elements to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including the element that death resulted from an occurrence of a nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.This bill would redefine a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. The bill facility and would modify the elements the department is required to prove in an action to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including, among other changes, to prove that the facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation. violation. The bill would increase the civil penalties for a class A, AA, or B violation by a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility, as specified. The bill would delete numerous references to the patients of a long-term health care facility.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Enrolled September 17, 2019 Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019 Passed IN Assembly September 12, 2019 Amended IN Senate September 06, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 08, 2019
5+ Amended IN Senate September 06, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2019 Amended IN Senate June 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019 Amended IN Assembly April 08, 2019
66
7-Enrolled September 17, 2019
8-Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019
9-Passed IN Assembly September 12, 2019
107 Amended IN Senate September 06, 2019
118 Amended IN Senate June 18, 2019
129 Amended IN Senate June 03, 2019
1310 Amended IN Assembly April 11, 2019
1411 Amended IN Assembly April 08, 2019
1512
1613 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION
1714
1815 Assembly Bill
1916
2017 No. 506
2118
2219 Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 13, 2019
2320
2421 Introduced by Assembly Member Kalra
2522 February 13, 2019
2623
2724 An act to amend Sections 1423, 1424, and 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to health facilities.
2825
2926 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3027
3128 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3229
33-AB 506, Kalra. Long-term health facilities.
30+AB 506, as amended, Kalra. Long-term health facilities.
3431
35-The Long-Term Care, Health, Safety, and Security Act of 1973 generally provides for the licensure and regulation of long-term health care facilities by the State Department of Public Health and establishes an inspection and reporting system to ensure that long-term health care facilities are in compliance with state statutes and regulations. The term long-term health care facility includes, among other types of facilities, a skilled nursing facility and intermediate care facility.The act defines a class A violation as a violation that the department determines presents either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. The act defines a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a direct proximate cause of death of a patient or resident of the facility. The act defines a class B violation as a violation that the department determines has a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility patients or residents, other than class AA or A violations. Class B violations are also, unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in specified regulations that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient. The act requires the department to prove specific elements to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including the element that death resulted from an occurrence of a nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.This bill would redefine a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility and would modify the elements the department is required to prove in an action to enforce a citation for a class AA violation. The bill would increase the civil penalties for a class A, AA, or B violation by a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility, as specified. The bill would delete numerous references to the patients of a long-term health care facility.
32+The Long-Term Care, Health, Safety, and Security Act of 1973 generally provides for the licensure and regulation of long-term health care facilities by the State Department of Public Health and establishes an inspection and reporting system to ensure that long-term health care facilities are in compliance with state statutes and regulations. The term long-term health care facility includes, among other types of facilities, a skilled nursing facility and intermediate care facility.The act defines a class A violation as a violation that the department determines presents either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. The act defines a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a direct proximate cause of death of a patient or resident of the facility. The act defines a class B violation as a violation that the department determines has a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility patients or residents, other than class AA or A violations. Class B violations are also, unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in specified regulations that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient. The act requires the department to prove specific elements to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including the element that death resulted from an occurrence of a nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.This bill would redefine a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. The bill facility and would modify the elements the department is required to prove in an action to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including, among other changes, to prove that the facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation. violation. The bill would increase the civil penalties for a class A, AA, or B violation by a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility, as specified. The bill would delete numerous references to the patients of a long-term health care facility.
3633
3734 The Long-Term Care, Health, Safety, and Security Act of 1973 generally provides for the licensure and regulation of long-term health care facilities by the State Department of Public Health and establishes an inspection and reporting system to ensure that long-term health care facilities are in compliance with state statutes and regulations. The term long-term health care facility includes, among other types of facilities, a skilled nursing facility and intermediate care facility.
3835
3936 The act defines a class A violation as a violation that the department determines presents either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to patients or residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. The act defines a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a direct proximate cause of death of a patient or resident of the facility. The act defines a class B violation as a violation that the department determines has a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility patients or residents, other than class AA or A violations. Class B violations are also, unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in specified regulations that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient. The act requires the department to prove specific elements to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including the element that death resulted from an occurrence of a nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.
4037
41-This bill would redefine a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility and would modify the elements the department is required to prove in an action to enforce a citation for a class AA violation. The bill would increase the civil penalties for a class A, AA, or B violation by a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility, as specified. The bill would delete numerous references to the patients of a long-term health care facility.
38+This bill would redefine a class AA violation as a class A violation that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. The bill facility and would modify the elements the department is required to prove in an action to enforce a citation for a class AA violation, including, among other changes, to prove that the facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation. violation. The bill would increase the civil penalties for a class A, AA, or B violation by a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility, as specified. The bill would delete numerous references to the patients of a long-term health care facility.
4239
4340 ## Digest Key
4441
4542 ## Bill Text
4643
47-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1423 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1423. (a) If upon inspection or investigation the director determines that a nursing facility is in violation of any state or federal law or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, or determines that any other long-term health care facility is in violation of any statutory provision or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, the director shall promptly, but not later than 24 hours, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and holidays, after the director determines or has reasonable cause to determine that an alleged violation has occurred, issue a notice to correct the violation and of intent to issue a citation to the licensee. Before completing the investigation and making the final determination whether to issue a citation, the department shall hold an exit conference with the licensee to identify the potential for issuing a citation for any violation, discuss investigative findings, and allow the licensee to provide the department with additional information related to the violation. The department shall consider this additional information, in conjunction with information from the inspection or investigation, in determining whether to issue a citation, or whether other action would be appropriate. If the department determines that the violation warrants the issuing of a citation and an exit conference has been completed it shall do either of the following:(1) Recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy or remedies on a nursing facility in accordance with federal law; or(2) (A) Issue a citation pursuant to state licensing laws, and if the facility is a nursing facility, may recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy.(B) A state citation shall be served upon the licensee within 30 days after completion of the investigation. Service shall be effected either personally or by registered or certified mail. A copy of the citation shall also be sent to each complainant. Each citation shall be in writing and shall describe with particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the statutory provision, standard, rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, the particular place or area of the facility in which the violation occurred, as well as the amount of any proposed assessment of a civil penalty. The name of any patient jeopardized by the alleged violation shall not be specified in the citation in order to protect the privacy of the patient. However, at the time the licensee is served with the citation, the licensee shall also be served with a written list of each of the names of the patients alleged to have been jeopardized by the violation, which shall not be subject to disclosure as a public record. The citation shall fix the earliest feasible time for the elimination of the condition constituting the alleged violation, when appropriate.(b) When no harm to patients, residents, or guests has occurred, a single incident, event, or occurrence shall result in no more than one citation for each statute or regulation violated.(c) A citation shall not be issued for a violation that has been reported by the licensee to the department, or its designee, as an unusual occurrence, if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The violation has not caused harm to any patient, resident, or guest, or significantly contributed thereto.(2) The licensee has promptly taken reasonable measures to correct the violation and to prevent a recurrence.(3) The unusual occurrence report was the first source of information reported to the department, or its designee, regarding the violation.SEC. 2. Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.SEC. 3. Section 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
44+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 1423 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1423. (a) If upon inspection or investigation the director determines that a nursing facility is in violation of any state or federal law or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, or determines that any other long-term health care facility is in violation of any statutory provision or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, the director shall promptly, but not later than 24 hours, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and holidays, after the director determines or has reasonable cause to determine that an alleged violation has occurred, issue a notice to correct the violation and of intent to issue a citation to the licensee. Before completing the investigation and making the final determination whether to issue a citation, the department shall hold an exit conference with the licensee to identify the potential for issuing a citation for any violation, discuss investigative findings, and allow the licensee to provide the department with additional information related to the violation. The department shall consider this additional information, in conjunction with information from the inspection or investigation, in determining whether to issue a citation, or whether other action would be appropriate. If the department determines that the violation warrants the issuing of a citation and an exit conference has been completed it shall do either of the following:(1) Recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy or remedies on a nursing facility in accordance with federal law; or(2) (A) Issue a citation pursuant to state licensing laws, and if the facility is a nursing facility, may recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy.(B) A state citation shall be served upon the licensee within 30 days after completion of the investigation. Service shall be effected either personally or by registered or certified mail. A copy of the citation shall also be sent to each complainant. Each citation shall be in writing and shall describe with particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the statutory provision, standard, rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, the particular place or area of the facility in which the violation occurred, as well as the amount of any proposed assessment of a civil penalty. The name of any patient jeopardized by the alleged violation shall not be specified in the citation in order to protect the privacy of the patient. However, at the time the licensee is served with the citation, the licensee shall also be served with a written list of each of the names of the patients alleged to have been jeopardized by the violation, which shall not be subject to disclosure as a public record. The citation shall fix the earliest feasible time for the elimination of the condition constituting the alleged violation, when appropriate.(b) When no harm to patients, residents, or guests has occurred, a single incident, event, or occurrence shall result in no more than one citation for each statute or regulation violated.(c) A citation shall not be issued for a violation that has been reported by the licensee to the department, or its designee, as an unusual occurrence, if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The violation has not caused harm to any patient, resident, or guest, or significantly contributed thereto.(2) The licensee has promptly taken reasonable measures to correct the violation and to prevent a recurrence.(3) The unusual occurrence report was the first source of information reported to the department, or its designee, regarding the violation.SEC. 2. Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The violation death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.SEC. 3. Section 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that was originally issued as a class AA citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident, but was subsequently reduced to a class A citation, resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
4845
4946 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5047
5148 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5249
5350 SECTION 1. Section 1423 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1423. (a) If upon inspection or investigation the director determines that a nursing facility is in violation of any state or federal law or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, or determines that any other long-term health care facility is in violation of any statutory provision or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, the director shall promptly, but not later than 24 hours, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and holidays, after the director determines or has reasonable cause to determine that an alleged violation has occurred, issue a notice to correct the violation and of intent to issue a citation to the licensee. Before completing the investigation and making the final determination whether to issue a citation, the department shall hold an exit conference with the licensee to identify the potential for issuing a citation for any violation, discuss investigative findings, and allow the licensee to provide the department with additional information related to the violation. The department shall consider this additional information, in conjunction with information from the inspection or investigation, in determining whether to issue a citation, or whether other action would be appropriate. If the department determines that the violation warrants the issuing of a citation and an exit conference has been completed it shall do either of the following:(1) Recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy or remedies on a nursing facility in accordance with federal law; or(2) (A) Issue a citation pursuant to state licensing laws, and if the facility is a nursing facility, may recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy.(B) A state citation shall be served upon the licensee within 30 days after completion of the investigation. Service shall be effected either personally or by registered or certified mail. A copy of the citation shall also be sent to each complainant. Each citation shall be in writing and shall describe with particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the statutory provision, standard, rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, the particular place or area of the facility in which the violation occurred, as well as the amount of any proposed assessment of a civil penalty. The name of any patient jeopardized by the alleged violation shall not be specified in the citation in order to protect the privacy of the patient. However, at the time the licensee is served with the citation, the licensee shall also be served with a written list of each of the names of the patients alleged to have been jeopardized by the violation, which shall not be subject to disclosure as a public record. The citation shall fix the earliest feasible time for the elimination of the condition constituting the alleged violation, when appropriate.(b) When no harm to patients, residents, or guests has occurred, a single incident, event, or occurrence shall result in no more than one citation for each statute or regulation violated.(c) A citation shall not be issued for a violation that has been reported by the licensee to the department, or its designee, as an unusual occurrence, if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The violation has not caused harm to any patient, resident, or guest, or significantly contributed thereto.(2) The licensee has promptly taken reasonable measures to correct the violation and to prevent a recurrence.(3) The unusual occurrence report was the first source of information reported to the department, or its designee, regarding the violation.
5451
5552 SECTION 1. Section 1423 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
5653
5754 ### SECTION 1.
5855
5956 1423. (a) If upon inspection or investigation the director determines that a nursing facility is in violation of any state or federal law or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, or determines that any other long-term health care facility is in violation of any statutory provision or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, the director shall promptly, but not later than 24 hours, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and holidays, after the director determines or has reasonable cause to determine that an alleged violation has occurred, issue a notice to correct the violation and of intent to issue a citation to the licensee. Before completing the investigation and making the final determination whether to issue a citation, the department shall hold an exit conference with the licensee to identify the potential for issuing a citation for any violation, discuss investigative findings, and allow the licensee to provide the department with additional information related to the violation. The department shall consider this additional information, in conjunction with information from the inspection or investigation, in determining whether to issue a citation, or whether other action would be appropriate. If the department determines that the violation warrants the issuing of a citation and an exit conference has been completed it shall do either of the following:(1) Recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy or remedies on a nursing facility in accordance with federal law; or(2) (A) Issue a citation pursuant to state licensing laws, and if the facility is a nursing facility, may recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy.(B) A state citation shall be served upon the licensee within 30 days after completion of the investigation. Service shall be effected either personally or by registered or certified mail. A copy of the citation shall also be sent to each complainant. Each citation shall be in writing and shall describe with particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the statutory provision, standard, rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, the particular place or area of the facility in which the violation occurred, as well as the amount of any proposed assessment of a civil penalty. The name of any patient jeopardized by the alleged violation shall not be specified in the citation in order to protect the privacy of the patient. However, at the time the licensee is served with the citation, the licensee shall also be served with a written list of each of the names of the patients alleged to have been jeopardized by the violation, which shall not be subject to disclosure as a public record. The citation shall fix the earliest feasible time for the elimination of the condition constituting the alleged violation, when appropriate.(b) When no harm to patients, residents, or guests has occurred, a single incident, event, or occurrence shall result in no more than one citation for each statute or regulation violated.(c) A citation shall not be issued for a violation that has been reported by the licensee to the department, or its designee, as an unusual occurrence, if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The violation has not caused harm to any patient, resident, or guest, or significantly contributed thereto.(2) The licensee has promptly taken reasonable measures to correct the violation and to prevent a recurrence.(3) The unusual occurrence report was the first source of information reported to the department, or its designee, regarding the violation.
6057
6158 1423. (a) If upon inspection or investigation the director determines that a nursing facility is in violation of any state or federal law or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, or determines that any other long-term health care facility is in violation of any statutory provision or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, the director shall promptly, but not later than 24 hours, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and holidays, after the director determines or has reasonable cause to determine that an alleged violation has occurred, issue a notice to correct the violation and of intent to issue a citation to the licensee. Before completing the investigation and making the final determination whether to issue a citation, the department shall hold an exit conference with the licensee to identify the potential for issuing a citation for any violation, discuss investigative findings, and allow the licensee to provide the department with additional information related to the violation. The department shall consider this additional information, in conjunction with information from the inspection or investigation, in determining whether to issue a citation, or whether other action would be appropriate. If the department determines that the violation warrants the issuing of a citation and an exit conference has been completed it shall do either of the following:(1) Recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy or remedies on a nursing facility in accordance with federal law; or(2) (A) Issue a citation pursuant to state licensing laws, and if the facility is a nursing facility, may recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy.(B) A state citation shall be served upon the licensee within 30 days after completion of the investigation. Service shall be effected either personally or by registered or certified mail. A copy of the citation shall also be sent to each complainant. Each citation shall be in writing and shall describe with particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the statutory provision, standard, rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, the particular place or area of the facility in which the violation occurred, as well as the amount of any proposed assessment of a civil penalty. The name of any patient jeopardized by the alleged violation shall not be specified in the citation in order to protect the privacy of the patient. However, at the time the licensee is served with the citation, the licensee shall also be served with a written list of each of the names of the patients alleged to have been jeopardized by the violation, which shall not be subject to disclosure as a public record. The citation shall fix the earliest feasible time for the elimination of the condition constituting the alleged violation, when appropriate.(b) When no harm to patients, residents, or guests has occurred, a single incident, event, or occurrence shall result in no more than one citation for each statute or regulation violated.(c) A citation shall not be issued for a violation that has been reported by the licensee to the department, or its designee, as an unusual occurrence, if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The violation has not caused harm to any patient, resident, or guest, or significantly contributed thereto.(2) The licensee has promptly taken reasonable measures to correct the violation and to prevent a recurrence.(3) The unusual occurrence report was the first source of information reported to the department, or its designee, regarding the violation.
6259
6360 1423. (a) If upon inspection or investigation the director determines that a nursing facility is in violation of any state or federal law or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, or determines that any other long-term health care facility is in violation of any statutory provision or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, the director shall promptly, but not later than 24 hours, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and holidays, after the director determines or has reasonable cause to determine that an alleged violation has occurred, issue a notice to correct the violation and of intent to issue a citation to the licensee. Before completing the investigation and making the final determination whether to issue a citation, the department shall hold an exit conference with the licensee to identify the potential for issuing a citation for any violation, discuss investigative findings, and allow the licensee to provide the department with additional information related to the violation. The department shall consider this additional information, in conjunction with information from the inspection or investigation, in determining whether to issue a citation, or whether other action would be appropriate. If the department determines that the violation warrants the issuing of a citation and an exit conference has been completed it shall do either of the following:(1) Recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy or remedies on a nursing facility in accordance with federal law; or(2) (A) Issue a citation pursuant to state licensing laws, and if the facility is a nursing facility, may recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy.(B) A state citation shall be served upon the licensee within 30 days after completion of the investigation. Service shall be effected either personally or by registered or certified mail. A copy of the citation shall also be sent to each complainant. Each citation shall be in writing and shall describe with particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the statutory provision, standard, rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, the particular place or area of the facility in which the violation occurred, as well as the amount of any proposed assessment of a civil penalty. The name of any patient jeopardized by the alleged violation shall not be specified in the citation in order to protect the privacy of the patient. However, at the time the licensee is served with the citation, the licensee shall also be served with a written list of each of the names of the patients alleged to have been jeopardized by the violation, which shall not be subject to disclosure as a public record. The citation shall fix the earliest feasible time for the elimination of the condition constituting the alleged violation, when appropriate.(b) When no harm to patients, residents, or guests has occurred, a single incident, event, or occurrence shall result in no more than one citation for each statute or regulation violated.(c) A citation shall not be issued for a violation that has been reported by the licensee to the department, or its designee, as an unusual occurrence, if all of the following conditions are met:(1) The violation has not caused harm to any patient, resident, or guest, or significantly contributed thereto.(2) The licensee has promptly taken reasonable measures to correct the violation and to prevent a recurrence.(3) The unusual occurrence report was the first source of information reported to the department, or its designee, regarding the violation.
6461
6562
6663
6764 1423. (a) If upon inspection or investigation the director determines that a nursing facility is in violation of any state or federal law or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, or determines that any other long-term health care facility is in violation of any statutory provision or regulation relating to the operation or maintenance of the facility, the director shall promptly, but not later than 24 hours, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and holidays, after the director determines or has reasonable cause to determine that an alleged violation has occurred, issue a notice to correct the violation and of intent to issue a citation to the licensee. Before completing the investigation and making the final determination whether to issue a citation, the department shall hold an exit conference with the licensee to identify the potential for issuing a citation for any violation, discuss investigative findings, and allow the licensee to provide the department with additional information related to the violation. The department shall consider this additional information, in conjunction with information from the inspection or investigation, in determining whether to issue a citation, or whether other action would be appropriate. If the department determines that the violation warrants the issuing of a citation and an exit conference has been completed it shall do either of the following:
6865
6966 (1) Recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy or remedies on a nursing facility in accordance with federal law; or
7067
7168 (2) (A) Issue a citation pursuant to state licensing laws, and if the facility is a nursing facility, may recommend the imposition of a federal enforcement remedy.
7269
7370 (B) A state citation shall be served upon the licensee within 30 days after completion of the investigation. Service shall be effected either personally or by registered or certified mail. A copy of the citation shall also be sent to each complainant. Each citation shall be in writing and shall describe with particularity the nature of the violation, including a reference to the statutory provision, standard, rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, the particular place or area of the facility in which the violation occurred, as well as the amount of any proposed assessment of a civil penalty. The name of any patient jeopardized by the alleged violation shall not be specified in the citation in order to protect the privacy of the patient. However, at the time the licensee is served with the citation, the licensee shall also be served with a written list of each of the names of the patients alleged to have been jeopardized by the violation, which shall not be subject to disclosure as a public record. The citation shall fix the earliest feasible time for the elimination of the condition constituting the alleged violation, when appropriate.
7471
7572 (b) When no harm to patients, residents, or guests has occurred, a single incident, event, or occurrence shall result in no more than one citation for each statute or regulation violated.
7673
7774 (c) A citation shall not be issued for a violation that has been reported by the licensee to the department, or its designee, as an unusual occurrence, if all of the following conditions are met:
7875
7976 (1) The violation has not caused harm to any patient, resident, or guest, or significantly contributed thereto.
8077
8178 (2) The licensee has promptly taken reasonable measures to correct the violation and to prevent a recurrence.
8279
8380 (3) The unusual occurrence report was the first source of information reported to the department, or its designee, regarding the violation.
8481
85-SEC. 2. Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.
82+SEC. 2. Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The violation death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.
8683
8784 SEC. 2. Section 1424 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
8885
8986 ### SEC. 2.
9087
91-1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.
88+1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The violation death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.
9289
93-1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.
90+1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The violation death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.
9491
95-1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.
92+1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.(a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.(2) The residents medical condition.(3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.(4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.(5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.(b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.(c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:(A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.(B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.(C) The violation death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.(D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.(2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.(2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.(2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.(g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.(1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).(2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.(B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.(3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.(h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.(i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.(j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.(k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.(l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.
9693
9794
9895
9996 1424. Citations issued pursuant to this chapter shall be classified according to the nature of the violation and shall indicate the classification on the face thereof.
10097
10198 (a) In determining the amount of the civil penalty, all relevant facts shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the following:
10299
103100 (1) The probability and severity of the risk that the violation presents to the residents mental and physical condition.
104101
105102 (2) The residents medical condition.
106103
107104 (3) The residents mental condition and the residents history of mental disability or disorder.
108105
109106 (4) The good faith efforts exercised by the facility to prevent the violation from occurring.
110107
111108 (5) The licensees history of compliance with regulations.
112109
113110 (b) Relevant facts considered by the department in determining the amount of the civil penalty shall be documented by the department on an attachment to the citation and available in the public record. This requirement shall not preclude the department or a facility from introducing facts not listed on the citation to support or challenge the amount of the civil penalty in any proceeding set forth in Section 1428.
114111
115112 (c) (1) Class AA violations are violations that meet the criteria for a class A violation and that the department determines to have been a substantial factor in the death of a resident of a long-term health care facility. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in the amount of not less than five thousand dollars ($5,000) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. In any action to enforce a citation issued under this subdivision, the department shall prove all of the following:
116113
117114 (A) The violation was a substantial factor in the death of a resident. A substantial factor is more than a remote or trivial factor, but is not required to be the only cause of harm.
118115
119116 (B) The facts and circumstances demonstrate that the death was a foreseeable result of the violation.
120117
121-(C) The death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.
118+(C) The violation death resulted from an occurrence of the nature that the regulation was designed to prevent.
122119
123120 (D) The resident suffering the death was among the class of persons for whose protection the regulation was adopted.
124121
125122 (2) If the department meets this burden of proof, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.
126123
127124 (3) Except as provided in Section 1424.5, for each class AA citation within a 12-month period that has become final, the department shall consider the suspension or revocation of the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294. For a third or subsequent class AA citation in a facility within that 12-month period that has been sustained, the department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.
128125
129126 (d) (1) Class A violations are violations that the department determines present either (1) imminent danger that death or serious harm to the residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom, or (2) substantial probability that death or serious physical harm to residents of the long-term health care facility would result therefrom. A physical condition or one or more practices, means, methods, or operations in use in a long-term health care facility may constitute a class A violation. The condition or practice constituting a class A violation shall be abated or eliminated immediately, unless a fixed period of time, as determined by the department, is required for correction. Except as provided in Section 1424.5, a class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each citation.
130127
131128 (2) If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.
132129
133130 (e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, a violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause or under circumstances likely to cause significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a patient is a class B violation. A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred dollars ($100) and not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each citation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.
134131
135132 (2) When a citation is issued pursuant to this paragraph, if the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.
136133
137134 (f) (1) A willful material falsification or willful material omission in the health record of a resident of a long-term health care facility is a violation.
138135
139136 (2) Willful material falsification, as used in this section, means any entry in the residents health care record pertaining to the administration of medication, or treatments ordered for the patient, or pertaining to services for the prevention or treatment of pressure ulcers or contractures, or pertaining to tests and measurements of vital signs, or notations of input and output of fluids, that was made with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.
140137
141138 (3) As used in this section, willful material omission means the willful failure to record any untoward event that has affected the health, safety, or security of the specific resident, and that was omitted with the knowledge that the records falsely reflect the condition of the resident or the care or services provided.
142139
143140 (g) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section 1424.5, a violation of subdivision (f) may result in a civil penalty not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000), as specified in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive.
144141
145142 (1) The willful material falsification or willful material omission is subject to a civil penalty of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) or more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in instances where the health care record is relied upon by a health care professional to the detriment of a resident by affecting the administration of medications or treatments, the issuance of orders, or the development of plans of care. In all other cases, violations of this subdivision are subject to a civil penalty not exceeding two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).
146143
147144 (2) (A) When the penalty assessed is one thousand dollars ($1,000) or less, the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Where the assessed penalty is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000), or for skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced, except as provided in this subdivision, in the same manner as a class A violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428.
148145
149146 (B) This section does not change previous law enacted by Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 1985 relative to this paragraph, but is a clarification of existing law.
150147
151148 (3) This subdivision does not preclude the department from issuing a class A or class B citation for any violation that meets the requirements for that citation, regardless of whether the violation also constitutes a violation of this subdivision. However, a single act, omission, or occurrence may not be cited both as a class A or class B violation and as a violation of this subdivision.
152149
153150 (h) When the licensee has failed to post the notices required by Section 9718 of the Welfare and Institutions Code in the manner required under Section 1422.6, the department shall assess the licensee a civil penalty in the amount of one hundred dollars ($100) for each day the failure to post the notices continues. When the total penalty assessed is less than two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class B violation, and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. When the assessed penalty is equal to or in excess of two thousand dollars ($2,000), the violation shall be issued and enforced in the same manner as a class A violation and shall include the right of appeal as specified in Section 1428. Fines collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be used to fund the costs incurred by the California Department of Aging in producing and posting the posters.
154151
155152 (i) The director shall prescribe procedures for the issuance of a notice of violation with respect to violations having only a minimal relationship to resident safety or health.
156153
157154 (j) The department shall provide a copy of all citations issued under this section to the affected residents whose treatment was the basis for the issuance of the citation, to the affected residents designated family member or representative of each of the residents, and to the complainant if the citation was issued as a result of a complaint.
158155
159156 (k) This section is not intended to change existing statutory or regulatory requirements governing the ability of a licensee to contest a citation pursuant to Section 1428.
160157
161158 (l) The department shall ensure that district office activities performed under Sections 1419 to 1424, inclusive, are consistent with the requirements of these sections and all applicable laws and regulations. To ensure the integrity of these activities, the department shall establish a statewide process for the collection of postsurvey evaluations from affected facilities.
162159
163-SEC. 3. Section 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
160+SEC. 3. Section 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that was originally issued as a class AA citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident, but was subsequently reduced to a class A citation, resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
164161
165162 SEC. 3. Section 1424.5 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
166163
167164 ### SEC. 3.
168165
169-1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
166+1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that was originally issued as a class AA citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident, but was subsequently reduced to a class A citation, resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
170167
171-1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
168+1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that was originally issued as a class AA citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident, but was subsequently reduced to a class A citation, resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
172169
173-1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
170+1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:(1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that was originally issued as a class AA citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident, but was subsequently reduced to a class A citation, resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).(3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.(4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.(b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.
174171
175172
176173
177174 1424.5. (a) In lieu of the fines specified in subdivisions (c), (d), (e), and (g) of Section 1424, fines imposed on skilled nursing facilities or intermediate care facilities, as specified in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 1418, shall be as follows:
178175
179176 (1) A class AA citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) and not exceeding one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) for each citation. For a second or subsequent class AA citation in a skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility within a 24-month period, the state department shall commence action to suspend or revoke the facilitys license in accordance with Section 1294.
180177
181-(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).
178+(2) A class A citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation. A class A citation that was originally issued as a class AA citation that resulted in the death of a patient or resident, but was subsequently reduced to a class A citation, resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) and not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000).
182179
183180 (3) Any willful material falsification or willful material omission, as those terms are defined in subdivision (f) of Section 1424, in the health record of a resident is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) and not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) for each citation.
184181
185182 (4) A class B citation is subject to a civil penalty in an amount not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and not exceeding three thousand dollars ($3,000). Class B violations are violations that the department determines have a direct or immediate relationship to the health, safety, or security of long-term health care facility residents, other than class AA or A violations. Unless otherwise determined by the department to be a class A violation pursuant to this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, any violation of a patients rights as set forth in Sections 72527 and 73523 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, that is determined by the department to cause, or under circumstances to be likely to cause, significant humiliation, indignity, anxiety, or other emotional trauma to a resident is a class B violation. A class B citation shall specify the time within which the violation is required to be corrected. If the department establishes that a violation occurred, the licensee shall have the burden of proving that the licensee did what might reasonably be expected of a long-term health care facility licensee, acting under similar circumstances, to comply with the regulation. If the licensee sustains this burden, then the citation shall be dismissed.
186183
187184 (b) A licensee may, in lieu of contesting a class AA or class A citation pursuant to Section 1428, transmit to the department, the minimum amount specified by law, or 65 percent of the amount specified in the citation, whichever is greater, for each violation, within 30 business days after the issuance of the citation.