HF3488
Personal care assistance and community first services and supports modified to include certain medication injections.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
To expand and clarify what Personal Care Assistants (PCAs) can provide under Minnesota’s care programs by adding certain medication injections and broader health-related procedures, while strengthening requirements for training, delegation, supervision, and documentation.
Main provisions
- Expanded scope of services
- Personal Care Assistance services may cover four main areas: activities of daily living (ADLs), health-related procedures and tasks, observation and redirection of behaviors, and instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs).
- Activities of daily living (ADLs)
- Covered ADLs include dressing, grooming, bathing, eating, transfers, mobility, positioning, and toileting-related care (including hygiene and skin care). Nail care remains included with a note: nail care is not provided for recipients who are diabetic or have poor circulation.
- Health-related procedures and tasks
- Includes procedures such as range of motion and passive exercise, assistance with self-administered medications (reminders, bringing medications, and helping with opening meds, including nebulized meds), and interventions for seizure disorders.
- Allows other health-related tasks within the defined scope.
- Complex health needs and delegation
- PCAs may perform health-related procedures and tasks for recipients with complex health needs if the tasks meet the defined criteria, and the PCA is trained by a qualified professional and demonstrates competency.
- Delegation and training must be documented in the recipient’s personal care plan and both the recipient’s and the PCA’s files.
- PCAs may not determine medication doses or timing unless specific requirements are met.
- Medication injections
- Medication injections may be performed by a PCA only after: (a) the task is delegated by a registered nurse (RN) or advanced practice registered nurse (APRN) who provides training, (b) the PCA receives individualized training about the recipient’s needs, and (c) the PCA is supervised by a qualified professional who is an RN, APRN, physician assistant, physician, or other licensed professional.
- Tracheostomy suctioning and ventilator-related care
- For tracheostomy suctioning and ventilator support, requirements include delegation and training by an RN/APRN/qualified professional, use of clean (not sterile) technique, specialized training about procedures and equipment (including ventilator operation/maintenance), individualized training, and supervision by an RN or other qualified professional.
- Observation and redirection of behaviors
- PCAs may observe and redirect recipients during behavioral episodes, with training tailored to the recipient’s needs and documented in the care plan.
- Documentation and care planning
- All training, delegation, and health-related procedures must be documented in the recipient’s personal care plan and in the PCA’s and recipient’s files.
Significant changes to existing law
- Broadens the scope of what PCAs can provide by formally including health-related procedures and tasks and, specifically, medication injections, under strict delegation, training, and supervision requirements.
- Establishes explicit requirements for delegation by RN/APRN and ongoing supervision for high-risk tasks (e.g., injections, tracheostomy suctioning, ventilator-related care).
- Recognizes observation and redirection of behaviors as a billable PCA service with defined training parameters.
- Adds detailed criteria for competency, individualized training, and documentation to ensure safety and accountability.
- Maintains a carve-out that PCAs cannot set medication doses or times without meeting the specified delegations and training.
Relevant Terms - Personal Care Assistant (PCA) - Medication injection - Self-administered medication - Health-related procedures and tasks - Range of motion - Nebulizer - Seizure interventions - Tracheostomy suctioning - Ventilator support - Delegation - Training - Supervision - Registered Nurse (RN) - Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN) - Care plan - Documentation - Activities of Daily Living (ADL) - Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) - Observation and redirection of behaviors - Nail care exception (diabetes or poor circulation)
Bill text versions
- Introduction PDF PDF file
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| February 19, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Human Services Finance and Policy |
Citations
[
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"Adds health-related procedures and tasks (including medication-related activities such as reminders, bringing medication, and assisting with opening medications) to the list of covered services.",
"Specifies delegation, training, and supervision requirements for health-related procedures and tasks, including medication injections, when performed by a personal care assistant."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "This bill amends Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 256B.0659, subdivision 2, to expand personal care assistance services to include health-related procedures and tasks, including medications and injections, as part of covered services and activities.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "256B.0659",
"subdivision": "2"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [
"Adds coverage for medication injections within CFSS or related services under the CFSS framework."
],
"removed": [],
"summary": "This bill amends Minnesota Statutes 2025 Supplement section 256B.85, subdivisions 2 through 16, to include medication injections as a covered service under Community First Services and Supports (CFSS) or related program provisions.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "256B.85",
"subdivision": "2-16"
}
]