SRC-JEC C.S.S.B. 1074 78(R)BILL ANALYSIS


Senate Research CenterC.S.S.B. 1074
78R10755 DLF-DBy: West
Health & Human Services
4/16/2003
Committee Report (Substituted)


DIGEST AND PURPOSE 

A recent federal report revealed that 39 percent of Texas nursing homes
had a violation of federal quality of care requirements that caused actual
harm to nursing home residents, including dehydration, physical abuse, and
sexual assault, or placed residents at risk of death or serious injury.
C.S.S.B. 1074 requires a nursing home owner or employee to report abuse or
neglect to the Texas Department of Human Services (DHS) and to law
enforcement.  It also expands the conditions under which DHS is required
to investigate reports of abuse or neglect within 24 hours to include
allegations of certain sexual offenses and bodily injury, and enhances the
interview and investigation processes related to abuse or neglect. 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

Rulemaking authority is expressly granted to the Texas Department of Human
Services in SECTION  6 of this bill. 

SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS

SECTION 1.  Amends Section 242.125, Health and Safety Code, by requiring a
report of abuse or neglect made by an owner or employee of an institution
to be made to the Texas Department of Human Services (DHS) and the law
enforcement agency described by Section 242.135(a).  Includes an exception
as provided by Section 242.135 to the requirement that a local or state
law enforcement agency receiving a report of abuse or neglect refer the
report to DHS or the designated agency. 

SECTION 2.  Amends Section 242.126, Health and Safety Code, by amending
Subsections (c), (e), and (g), and adding Subsections (l), (m), and (n),
as follows: 

(c)  Requires the agency to begin the investigation within 24 hours of
receipt of the report or other allegation if the report of abuse or
neglect or other complaint alleges that a resident has been a victim of
any act or attempted act described by Section 21.11 (Indecency With a
Child), 22.011 (Sexual Assault), 22.021 (Aggravated Sexual Assault), Penal
Code; or a resident has suffered bodily injury as defined by Section 1.07
(Definitions), Penal Code, because of conduct alleged in the report of
abuse or neglect or other complaint. 

(e)  Requires an investigator for an investigating agency that is
investigating a report of abuse or neglect or other complaint to interview
each available witness, including the resident that suffered the alleged
abuse or neglect if the resident is able to communicate, or another
resident or other witness identified as having relevant knowledge; to make
a photographic record of any injury to a resident, subject to Subsection
(n); and to include the statement of the resident that suffered the
alleged abuse or neglect and any other resident interviewed in the
investigation in a summary of each witness statement. 

(g)  Requires DHS to delete photographs of any injury to the resident from
any copy of the investigation report made available to the public. 

 (l)  Requires DHS or the designated agency, within 24 hours of receipt of
a report of abuse or neglect or other complaint described by Section
(c)(1), to report the report or complaint to the law enforcement agency
described by Section 242.135(a) and to cooperate with that law enforcement
agency in the investigation of the report or complaint as described by
Section 242.135. 

(m)  Provides that the inability or unwillingness of a local law
enforcement agency to conduct a joint investigation under Section 242.135
does not constitute grounds to prevent or prohibit DHS from performing its
duties under this chapter.  Requires DHS to document any instance in which
a law enforcement agency is unable or unwilling to conduct a joint
investigation under Section 242.135. 

(n)  Requires the investigator, if DHS determines that, before a
photographic record of an injury to a resident may be made under
Subsection (e), consent is required under state or federal law, to seek to
obtain any required consent, and to refrain from making the photographic
record unless the consent is obtained.  

SECTION 3.  Amends Section 242.127, Health and Safety Code, to require the
report, record, or working paper, and the name, address, and phone number
of the person making the report, to be disclosed to a law enforcement
agency as necessary to permit the law enforcement agency to investigate a
report of abuse or neglect or other complaint in accordance with Section
242.135. 

SECTION  4.  Amends Subchapter E, Chapter 242, Health and Safety Code, by
adding Section 242.135, as follows: 

Sec. 242.135.  DUTIES OF LAW ENFORCEMENT; JOINT INVESTIGATION.  (a)
Requires a law enforcement department or designated agency to investigate
a report of abuse or neglect or other complaint described by Section
242.126(c)(1) jointly with the municipal law enforcement agency or the
sheriff's department of the county as appropriate. 

(b)  Requires the law enforcement agency described by Subsection (a) to
acknowledge the report of abuse or neglect or other complaint and begin
the joint investigation required by this section within 24 hours of
receipt of the report or complaint.  Requires the law enforcement agency
to cooperate with DHS or the designated agency and report to DHS or the
designated agency the results of the investigation. 

(c)  Provides that the requirement that the law enforcement agency and DHS
or designated agency conduct a joint investigation under this section does
not require that a representative of each agency be physically present
during all phases of the investigation or that each agency participate
equally in each activity conducted in the course of the investigation. 

SECTION  5.  Amends Article 2.27, Code of Criminal Procedure, as follows:

Art. 2.27.  New heading:  INVESTIGATION OF CERTAIN REPORTS ALLEGING ABUSE.
(a)  Creates this subsection from existing text.   

(b)  Requires the appropriate local law enforcement agency, on receipt of
a report of abuse or neglect or other complaint of a resident of a nursing
home, convalescent home, or other related institution under Section
242.126(c)(1), Health and Safety Code, to investigate the report as
required by Section 242.135, Health and Safety Code. 

SECTION  6.  Requires DHS, not later than January 1, 2004, to determine
whether, before a photographic record of an injury to a resident may be
made under Subsection 242.126(e), Health and  Safety Code, as amended by
this Act, consent is required under state or federal law, and to adopt any
rules necessary to implement any consent requirement. 

SECTION  7.  Effective date:  September 1, 2003.