HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS
BILL #: CS/HB 413 Delegation of the Administration of Prescription Medications
SPONSOR(S): Health & Human Services Committee, Snyder
TIED BILLS: IDEN./SIM. BILLS: SB 700
REFERENCE ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF
1) Professions & Public Health Subcommittee 16 Y, 0 N Rahming McElroy
2) Health & Human Services Committee 19 Y, 0 N, As CS Rahming Calamas
SUMMARY ANALYSIS
Certified nursing assistants (CNAs) and home-health aides (HHAs) assist older individuals and those with
disabilities with daily tasks, such as dressing, bathing, and eating. Under current law, a CNA or HHA may
administer oral, transdermal, ophthalmic, otic, rectal, inhaled, enteral, or topical prescription medications to a
patient of a home health agency if a registered nurse delegates such tasks. The CNA or HHA must complete
board-approved training, and be found competent to administer medication to a patient in a safe and sanitary
manner.
A nurse registry is an agency licensed to secure employment for registered nurses, licensed practical nurses,
certified nursing assistants, home health aides, homemakers, and companions (caregivers) in a patient’s home
or with health care facilities or other entities. Caregivers referred for contract to a patient by a nurse registry are
independent contractors not employees of the nurse registry. Nurse registries must advise patients that
caregivers referred for contract are independent contractors and that the nurse registry is prohibited from
monitoring, supervising, managing, or training caregivers.
Under current law, a registered nurse is not authorized to delegate to a CNA or HHA medication administration
to a patient of a nurse registry.
HB 413 authorizes a registered nurse to delegate to a CNA or HHA medication administration to a patient of a
nurse registry or county detention facility. The bill requires a nurse registry that authorizes a registered nurse to
delegate tasks to a CNA or HHA to ensure that such delegation meets specified requirements. The bill requires
the Board, in consultation with AHCA, to adopt rules on the standards and procedures that a CNA must follow
for medication administration to a patient of a nurse registry.
The bill has no fiscal impact on state or local governments.
The bill has an effective date of July 1, 2022.
This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives .
STORAGE NAME: h0413d.HHS
DATE: 1/25/2022
FULL ANALYSIS
I. SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES:
Present Situation
Florida Direct Care Workers
Direct care workers assist older individuals and those with disabilities with daily tasks, such as
dressing, bathing, and eating.1 They work in many different settings, such as private homes, group
homes, residential care facilities, assisted living facilities, skilled nursing facilities, and hospitals. 2 Direct
care workers account for 70 to 80 percent of all paid hands-on long-term care and personal assistance
for the elderly or disabled.3
Nursing Assistants or Nursing Aides
Nursing assistants or nursing aides generally work in nursing homes, although some work in assisted
living facilities, other community-based settings, or hospitals.4 The Florida Board of Nursing (Board),
within the Department of Health, certifies nursing assistants (CNAs) who must, among other things,
hold a high school diploma or equivalent, complete a 120-hour board-approved training program, and
pass a nursing assistant competency exam.5 The Board establishes the general scope of practice for
CNAs, who perform services under the general supervision6 of a registered nurse or licensed practical
nurse.7 A CNA may not work independently and may not perform any tasks that require specialized
nursing knowledge, judgment, or skills.8
Home Health Aides
Home health aides (HHA) provide essentially the same care and services as nursing assistants, but
they assist people in their homes or in community settings under the supervision of a nurse or a
physical, speech, occupational, or respiratory therapist. 9 In Florida, HHAs are not licensed or certified.
However, the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) licenses home health agencies and
establishes training requirements for HHAs employed by home health agencies. HHAs who work for
state licensed only home health agencies or who work for a nurse registry must complete 40 hours of
training or pass an AHCA-developed competency examination.10 However, HHAs who works for a
home health agency certified by Medicare or Medicaid must complete at least 75 hours of training and
successfully pass a competency evaluation to meet federal regulations.11
Nurse Delegation of Duties
1 Paraprofessional Healthcare Institute, Understanding the Direct Care Workforce, available at https://phinational.org/policy-
research/key-facts-faq/ (last visited Nov. 22, 2021).
2
Paraprofessional Healthcare Institute, Direct Care Workforce 2018 Year in Review, https://phinational.org/resource/the-direct-care-
workforce-year-in-review-2018/ (last visited Nov. 22, 2021).
3 Paraprofessional Healthcare Institute, Who Are Direct-Care Workers? https://phinational.org/wp-
content/uploads/legacy/clearinghouse/NCDCW%20Fact%20Sheet-1.pdf (last visited Nov. 22, 2021).
4 Id.
5
S. 464.203, F.S., and r. 64B9-15.006, F.A.C. Eighty hours must be classroom instruction and 40 hours must be clinical instruction, 20
of which must be in long term care clinical instruction in a licensed nursing home. 42 C.F.R. § 483.152 requires 75 hours of training;
Florida training requirements exceed the federal minimum training requirements.
6 Under general supervision, the registered nurse or licensed practical nurse does not need to be present but must be available for
consultation and advice, either in person or by a communication device. R. 64B9-15.001(6), F.A.C
7 R. 64B9-15.002, F.A.C.
8 Id.
9 Supra note 3. If the only service the home health agency provides is physical, speech, or occupational therapy, in addition to home
health aide or CNA services, a licensed therapist may provide supervision . R. 59A-8.0095, F.A.C.
10 R. 59A-8.0095(5)(d).
11 42 C.F.R. § 484.80. See also, Agency for Health Care Administration, Home Health Aides, available at
https://ahca.myflorida.com/MCHQ/Health_Facility_Regulation/Lab_HomeServ/HHA/Home_health_aides.shtml (last visited Nov. 22,
2021).
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Under current law, a registered nurse is authorized to delegate any task, including medication
administration, to a CNA or HHA,12 if the registered nurse determines that the CNA or HHA is
competent to perform the task, the task is delegable under federal law, and the task: 13
Is within the nurse’s scope of practice;
Frequently recurs in the routine care of a patient or group of patients;
Is performed according to an established sequence of steps;
Involves little or no modification from one patient to another;
May be performed with a predictable outcome;
Does not inherently involve ongoing assessment, interpretation, or clinical judgement; and
Does not endanger a patient’s life or well-being.
Medication Administration
Medication administration is to obtain and provide a single dose of a medication to a patient for his or
her consumption.14 Currently, a CNA or HHA may administer oral, transdermal, ophthalmic, otic, rectal,
inhaled, enteral, or topical prescription medications to a patient of a home health agency if a registered
nurse delegates such tasks to the CNA and the CNA:15
Has completed a 6-hour training course approved by the Board; and
Has been found competent to administer medication to a patient in a safe and sanitary manner.
A registered nurse or physician must conduct the training and determine whether the CNA or HHA can
competently administer medication, and annually validate such competency. 16 A registered nurse is
prohibited from delegating the administration of medications listed as Schedule II, Schedule III, or
Schedule IV controlled substances.17
Current law requires the Board and AHCA to adopt rules, in consultation with each other, on the
standards and procedures that a CNA or HHA must follow for medication administration to a patient of
a home health agency.18 Such rules must address qualifications for trainers, medication label
requirements, documentation and recordkeeping, storage and disposal of medication, instructions for
safe medication administration, informed consent, training curriculum, and validation procedures. 19
Under current law, a registered nurse is not authorized to delegate to a CNA or HHA medication
administration to a patient of a nurse registry.
Nurse Registries
A nurse registry is an agency licensed to secure employment for registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses, certified nursing assistants, home health aides, homemakers, and companions (caregivers) in a
patient’s home or with health care facilities or other entities. 20 Nurse registries are governed by part II of
chapter 408, F.S.,21 associated rules in Chapter 59A-35, F.A.C., and the nurse registry rules in Chapter
59A-18, F.A.C. A nurse registry must be licensed by AHCA to offer contracts in Florida. 22
12 Ss. 400.489 and 464.2035, F.S. Home health aide includes those CNAs who work in positions that work as home health aides or
equivalent positions.
13 Ss. 400.489 and 464.0156, F.S.
14 S. 465.003, F.S.
15 Ss. 400.489(1) and 464.2035(1), F.S.
16 Id.
17 S. 464.0156(1), F.S
18 Ss. 400.489(3) and 464.2035(3), F.S.
19 Id.
20 S. 400.462(21), F.S.
21 S. 400.506(2), F.S. A nurse registry is also governed by the provisions in s. 400.506, F.S.
22 S. 400.506(1), F.S.
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A caregiver referred by a nurse registry for contract in a private residences who is not a nurse licensed
under part I of chapter 464, such as a CNA or HHA, may only provide patient services or care for which
they have been certified or trained to perform under current law or rules of AHCA or the Department of
Business and Professional Regulation.23 Providing services beyond their authorized scope constitutes
the unauthorized practice of medicine or a violation of the Nurse Practice Act and is subject to
punishment as provided under current law.
A caregiver referred for contract to a patient by a nurse registry is an independent contractor, not an
employee of the nurse registry.24 Nurse registries must advise patients that a caregiver referred for
contract is an independent contractor and that the nurse registry is prohibited from monitoring,
supervising, managing, or training the caregiver.25
County Detention Facility
Under current law, registered nurses are not authorized to delegate medication administration to CNAs
and home health aides in a county detention facility, which includes a county jail, stockade, work camp,
residential probation center, and any other place a county or county officer uses to detain persons
charged with or convicted of crimes.26 It does not include a municipal detention facility.27
Effect of Proposed Bill
HB 413 authorizes a registered nurse to delegate to a CNA or HHA medication administration to a
patient of a nurse registry or county detention facility. The bill requires a nurse registry that authorizes a
registered nurse to delegate tasks to a CNA or HHA to ensure that such delegation meets the
requirements of chapter 400, chapter 464, and the rules adopted thereunder.
The bill requires the Board, in consultation with AHCA, to adopt rules on the standards and procedures
that a CNA must follow for medication administration to a patient of a nurse registry.
The bill has an effective date of July 1, 2022.
B. SECTION DIRECTORY:
Section 1: Amends s. 400.506, relating to the licensure of nurse registries.
Section 2: Amends s. 464.0156, relating to the delegation of duties.
Section 3: Amends s. 464.2035, relating to the administration of medication.
Section 4: Provides an effective date of July 1, 2022.
II. FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT:
1. Revenues:
None.
2. Expenditures:
None.
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS:
23 S. 400.506(7).
24 S. 400.506(6)(d).
25 S. 400.506(6)(e).
26 S. 951.23(1)(a), F.S.
27 “Municipal detention facility” means a city jail, a city stockade, a city prison camp, and any other place except a county detention
facility used by a municipality or municipal officer for the detention of persons charged with or convicted of violation of m unicipal laws or
ordinances. S. 951.23(1)(d), F.S.
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DATE: 1/25/2022
1. Revenues:
None.
2. Expenditures:
None.
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR:
None.
D. FISCAL COMMENTS:
None.
III. COMMENTS
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES:
1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision:
Not applicable. This bill does not appear to affect county or municipal governments.
2. Other:
None.
B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY:
The bill provides sufficient rulemaking authority to implement the bill.
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS:
None.
IV. AMENDMENTS/COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES
On January 24, 2022, the Health & Human Services Committee adopted an amendment to HB 413 and
reported the bill favorably as a committee substitute. The amendment authorizes registered nurses to
delegate medication administration to CNAs and home health aides in county detention facility settings.
This analysis is drafted to the committee substitute as passed by the Health & Human Services Committee.
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DATE: 1/25/2022
Statutes affected: H 413 Filed: 400.506, 464.0156
H 413 c1: 400.506, 464.0156