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2010 Florida Statutes
Application for license; fee.
Application for license; fee.
—Each applicant for licensure must comply with all provisions of this part and part II of chapter 408.
In addition to the requirements of part II of chapter 408, the initial applicant must file with the application satisfactory proof that the home health agency is in compliance with this part and applicable rules, including:
A listing of services to be provided, either directly by the applicant or through contractual arrangements with existing providers.
The number and discipline of professional staff to be employed.
Completion of questions concerning volume data on the renewal application as determined by rule.
A business plan, signed by the applicant, which details the home health agency’s methods to obtain patients and its plan to recruit and maintain staff.
Evidence of contingency funding equal to 1 month’s average operating expenses during the first year of operation.
A balance sheet, income and expense statement, and statement of cash flows for the first 2 years of operation which provide evidence of having sufficient assets, credit, and projected revenues to cover liabilities and expenses. The applicant has demonstrated financial ability to operate if the applicant’s assets, credit, and projected revenues meet or exceed projected liabilities and expenses. An applicant may not project an operating margin of 15 percent or greater for any month in the first year of operation. All documents required under this paragraph must be prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and compiled and signed by a certified public accountant.
All other ownership interests in health care entities for each controlling interest, as defined in part II of chapter 408.
In the case of an application for initial licensure, documentation of accreditation, or an application for accreditation, from an accrediting organization that is recognized by the agency as having standards comparable to those required by this part and part II of chapter 408. Notwithstanding s. 408.806, an applicant that has applied for accreditation must provide proof of accreditation that is not conditional or provisional within 120 days after the date of the agency’s receipt of the application for licensure or the application shall be withdrawn from further consideration. Such accreditation must be maintained by the home health agency to maintain licensure. The agency shall accept, in lieu of its own periodic licensure survey, the submission of the survey of an accrediting organization that is recognized by the agency if the accreditation of the licensed home health agency is not provisional and if the licensed home health agency authorizes releases of, and the agency receives the report of, the accrediting organization.
In addition to the requirements of s. 408.810, the home health agency must also obtain and maintain the following insurance coverage in an amount of not less than $250,000 per claim, and the home health agency must submit proof of coverage with an initial application for licensure and with each application for license renewal:
Malpractice insurance as defined in s. 624.605(1)(k).
Liability insurance as defined in s. 624.605(1)(b).
The agency shall accept, in lieu of its own periodic licensure survey, submission of the survey of an accrediting organization that is recognized by the agency if the accreditation of the licensed home health agency is not provisional and if the licensed home health agency authorizes release of, and the agency receives the report of, the accrediting organization.
In accordance with s. 408.805, an applicant or licensee shall pay a fee for each license application submitted under this part, part II of chapter 408, and applicable rules. The amount of the fee shall be established by rule and shall be set at an amount that is sufficient to cover the agency’s costs in carrying out its responsibilities under this part, but not to exceed $2,000 per biennium. However, state, county, or municipal governments applying for licenses under this part are exempt from the payment of license fees.
The agency may not issue a license designated as certified to a home health agency that fails to satisfy the requirements of a Medicare certification survey from the agency.
The agency may not issue an initial license to an applicant for a home health agency license if the applicant shares common controlling interests with another licensed home health agency that is located within 10 miles of the applicant and is in the same county. The agency must return the application and fees to the applicant.
An application for a home health agency license may not be transferred to another home health agency or controlling interest before issuance of the license.
A licensed home health agency that seeks to relocate to a different geographic service area not listed on its license must submit an initial application for a home health agency license for the new location.
The agency may not issue a renewal license for a home health agency in any county having at least one licensed home health agency and that has more than one home health agency per 5,000 persons, as indicated by the most recent population estimates published by the Legislature’s Office of Economic and Demographic Research, if the applicant or any controlling interest has been administratively sanctioned by the agency during the 2 years prior to the submission of the licensure renewal application for one or more of the following acts:
An intentional or negligent act that materially affects the health or safety of a client of the provider;
Knowingly providing home health services in an unlicensed assisted living facility or unlicensed adult family-care home, unless the home health agency or employee reports the unlicensed facility or home to the agency within 72 hours after providing the services;
Preparing or maintaining fraudulent patient records, such as, but not limited to, charting ahead, recording vital signs or symptoms which were not personally obtained or observed by the home health agency’s staff at the time indicated, borrowing patients or patient records from other home health agencies to pass a survey or inspection, or falsifying signatures;
Failing to provide at least one service directly to a patient for a period of 60 days;
Demonstrating a pattern of falsifying documents relating to the training of home health aides or certified nursing assistants or demonstrating a pattern of falsifying health statements for staff who provide direct care to patients. A pattern may be demonstrated by a showing of at least three fraudulent entries or documents;
Demonstrating a pattern of billing any payor for services not provided. A pattern may be demonstrated by a showing of at least three billings for services not provided within a 12-month period;
Demonstrating a pattern of failing to provide a service specified in the home health agency’s written agreement with a patient or the patient’s legal representative, or the plan of care for that patient, unless a reduction in service is mandated by Medicare, Medicaid, or a state program or as provided in s. 400.492(3). A pattern may be demonstrated by a showing of at least three incidents, regardless of the patient or service, in which the home health agency did not provide a service specified in a written agreement or plan of care during a 3-month period;
Giving remuneration to a case manager, discharge planner, facility-based staff member, or third-party vendor who is involved in the discharge planning process of a facility licensed under chapter 395, chapter 429, or this chapter from whom the home health agency receives referrals or gives remuneration as prohibited in s. 400.474(6)(a);
Giving cash, or its equivalent, to a Medicare or Medicaid beneficiary;
Demonstrating a pattern of billing the Medicaid program for services to Medicaid recipients which are medically unnecessary as determined by a final order. A pattern may be demonstrated by a showing of at least two such medically unnecessary services within one Medicaid program integrity audit period;
Providing services to residents in an assisted living facility for which the home health agency does not receive fair market value remuneration; or
Providing staffing to an assisted living facility for which the home health agency does not receive fair market value remuneration.
The agency may not issue an initial license to a home health agency under part II of chapter 408 or this part for the purpose of opening a new home health agency until July 1, 2010, in any county that has at least one actively licensed home health agency and a population of persons 65 years of age or older, as indicated in the most recent population estimates published by the Executive Office of the Governor, of fewer than 1,200 per home health agency. In such counties, for any application received by the agency prior to July 1, 2009, which has been deemed by the agency to be complete except for proof of accreditation, the agency may issue an initial ownership license only if the applicant has applied for accreditation before May 1, 2009, from an accrediting organization that is recognized by the agency.
Effective October 1, 2009, the agency may not issue a change of ownership license to a home health agency under part II of chapter 408 or this part until July 1, 2010, in any county that has at least one actively licensed home health agency and a population of persons 65 years of age or older, as indicated in the most recent population estimates published by the Executive Office of the Governor, of fewer than 1,200 per home health agency. In such counties, for any application received by the agency prior to October 1, 2009, which has been deemed by the agency to be complete except for proof of accreditation, the agency may issue a change of ownership license only if the applicant has applied for accreditation before August 1, 2009, from an accrediting organization that is recognized by the agency.
s. 41, ch. 75-233; s. 7, ch. 77-400; s. 2, ch. 81-318; ss. 79, 83, ch. 83-181; s. 45, ch. 87-92; s. 4, ch. 90-319; ss. 4, 23, ch. 93-214; s. 30, ch. 97-100; ss. 48, 71, ch. 98-171; s. 127, ch. 99-8; s. 218, ch. 99-13; s. 3, ch. 99-332; s. 19, ch. 2000-153; s. 2, ch. 2000-256; ss. 3, 157, ch. 2000-318; s. 78, ch. 2000-349; s. 25, ch. 2001-53; s. 2, ch. 2001-67; s. 148, ch. 2001-277; s. 420, ch. 2003-261; s. 47, ch. 2004-267; s. 4, ch. 2005-243; s. 75, ch. 2007-230; s. 3, ch. 2008-246; s. 5, ch. 2009-193; s. 5, ch. 2009-223.
Created as new subsection (10) by s. 5, ch. 2009-193, and redesignated as subsection (11) by the editors. For a description of multiple acts in the same session affecting a statutory provision, see preface to the Florida Statutes, “Statutory Construction.” Substantially similar material was created as subsection (11) by s. 5, ch. 2009-223, and that version reads:
(11) The agency may not issue an initial or change of ownership license to a home health agency under this part for the purpose of opening a new home health agency until July 1, 2010, in any county that has at least one actively licensed home health agency and a population of persons 65 years of age or older, as indicated in the most recent population estimates published by the Executive Office of the Governor, of fewer than 1,200 per home health agency. In such counties, for any application received by the agency prior to July 1, 2009, which has been deemed by the agency to be complete except for proof of accreditation, the agency may issue an initial or a change of ownership license only if the applicant has applied for accreditation before May 1, 2009, from an accrediting organization that is recognized by the agency.