(a) Resident bedrooms. Each resident bedroom must meet
the following requirements:
(1) The maximum room capacity must be two residents.
(2) Minimum bedroom area, excluding toilet rooms, closets,
lockers, wardrobes, alcoves, or vestibules, must be 100 square feet
in single occupancy rooms and 80 square feet per bed in multi-bed
rooms.
(3) The minimum allowable room dimension is ten feet.
The room must be designed to provide at least 36 inches between beds
and 24 inches between any bed and the adjacent wall.
(4) Each room must have at least one operable outside
window arranged and located so that it can be easily opened from the
inside without the use of tools or keys. The maximum allowable sill
height must not exceed 36 inches above the floor. All operable windows
must have insect screens. The minimum area of window in each bedroom
must equal at least 16 square feet or 8.0% of the gross floor area
of the room, whichever is larger. Operable window sections may be
restricted to not more than six nor less than four inches for security
or safety reasons.
(5) Each room must have general lighting, wall-mounted
bed reading lights, and night lighting. The night light must be switched
just inside the entrance to each resident room with a silent type
switch, must be a recessed wall mounted fixture just inside the entry
door to the room and must not be obstructed by the door or furniture,
unless otherwise approved by HHSC. The light providing general illumination
must be switchable at the door of the resident room for use of staff
and residents. A durable non-glare reading light with an opaque front
panel securely anchored to the wall, integrally wired, must be provided
above each resident bed. The switch for this reading light must be
within reach of a resident in the bed.
(6) The minimum number of power receptacles at a resident
bed location shall be determined based on the risk assessment required
by NFPA 99 and §19.300(i) of this subchapter (relating to General
Requirements), as follows:
(A) All receptacles must be listed and identified as
"hospital grade";
(B) Four of the required receptacles must be provided
beside the head of each bed;
(C) No fewer than eight receptacles must be provided
within the patient care vicinity, as defined in NFPA 99;
(D) If the failure of patient-care-related electrical
equipment is likely to cause major injury or death to a resident,
no fewer than fourteen receptacles must be provided within the patient
care vicinity.
(E) Additional receptacles, beyond the minimum quantities
above, must be provided to ensure the electrical needs of all residents
living in the bedroom are met, including power for TV, radio, razors,
hairdryers, clocks, or as required by NFPA 99 and NFPA 70.
(7) Each resident bedroom must have direct access to
a bathroom without entering the general corridor area. The bathroom
must serve no more than one resident room and must include, at least,
a lavatory and toilet.
(8) Each resident must have a bed with a comfortable
mattress, a bedside stand with at least two enclosed storage spaces,
a dresser, and closet or wardrobe space providing privacy for clothing
and personal belongings. Private clothes storage space must provide
at least 22 inches of lineal hanging space per bed and have closable
doors. Chairs and space must be provided for use by residents and
visitors.
(9) Each room must open onto an exit corridor and must
be arranged for convenient resident access to dining, living, and
bathing areas. To ensure a direct view from nurses’ stations,
resident room doors must not be recessed into the corridor wall more
than four feet. Alcoves must meet applicable accessibility standards
for a front approach to the door, and handrails must be provided in
the alcove. If an alcove exceeds four feet in depth, it is a corridor
and must meet all requirements for corridors, including direct view
from a nurses’ station, minimum width of the corridor, and provisions
for handrails.
(10) Visual privacy, such as cubicle curtains, must
be available for each resident in multi-bed bedrooms. Design for privacy
must not restrict resident access to the entry, lavatory, or toilet,
nor may it restrict bed evacuation or obstruct sprinkler flow coverage.
(11) At least one noncombustible wastebasket must
be provided in each bedroom.
(12) See the requirements in §19.361(d)(4) of
this subchapter (relating to Electrical Requirements for New Facilities)
for nurse call systems.
(13) Bedrooms must be identified with a raised or recessed
unique number placed on or near the door. Refer to TAS for information
about signs.
(14) Locks on bedroom doors are permitted when they
meet definite resident needs.
(A) Situations in which locks may be necessary include
the following:
(i) married couples whose rights of privacy could be
infringed upon unless bedroom door locks are permitted; and
(ii) residents for whom the attending physician wants
bedroom door locks to enhance the residents’ sense of security.
(B) In situations such as those listed in subparagraph
(A) of this paragraph, the following guidelines must be met:
(i) bedroom door locks must be of the type which the
occupant can unlock at will from inside the room;
(ii) all bedroom door locks must be of the type which
can be unlocked from the corridor side;
(iii) attendants must carry keys which will permit
ready access to the locked bedrooms when entrance becomes necessary;
(iv) locking of bedroom doors by residents for privacy
or security will not be permitted except when specifically included
in the attending physician's written orders or authorized by the
nursing facility administrator.
(15) Vacant bedrooms must not be used for hazardous
activities or hazardous storage, unless specifically approved by HHSC
in writing.
(b) Nursing service areas. A nursing service area includes
a nurses’ station and other areas described in this subsection
and must be located in or readily available to each nursing unit.
The size and disposition of each service area will depend upon the
number and types of beds to be served. Each service area may be arranged
and located to serve more than one nursing unit, but at least one
service area must be provided on each nursing floor. The maximum allowable
distance from a resident room door to a nurses' station is 150 feet.
The following requirements are applicable to services areas:
(1) Nurses' stations must be provided with space for
nurses' charting, doctors' charting, and storage for administrative
supplies. Nurses’ stations must be located to provide a direct
view of resident corridors. A nurses’ station has a direct view
of a resident corridor if a person can see down the corridor from
a point within 24 inches of the outside of the nurses’ station
counter or wall. When a nurses’ station does not provide a direct
view of a resident corridor, an auxiliary station complying with the
following guidelines must be provided.
(A) The auxiliary station must be staffed by nursing
personnel during all shifts.
(i) More than one auxiliary station may be assigned
to a designated nurses’ station, regardless of the distance
between stations.
(ii) The nurse call system for resident corridors monitored
by the auxiliary station must report to the auxiliary station.
(iii) Each auxiliary station must meet the emergency
electrical requirements for a nurse’s station, including electrical
receptacles and emergency lighting.
(iv) If a required auxiliary station does not already
exist and the facility must establish a new auxiliary station, all
applicable standards, particularly those pertaining to the physical
plant and NFPA 101, must be observed.
(B) In addition to the required normal and emergency
illumination, the facility must keep on hand and readily available
to night staff no less than one working flashlight at each nurses’
station.
(2) Lounge and toilet room must be provided for nursing
staff.
(3) Lockers or security compartments must be provided
for the safekeeping of personal effects of staff. These must be located
convenient to the duty station of personnel or in a central location.
(4) A clean utility room must contain a work counter,
sink with high-neck faucet with lever controls, and storage facilities
and must be part of a system for storage and distribution of clean
and sterile supply materials.
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