Applicants who seek licensure as a Nursing Home Administrator must meet one of the following program requirements:
For licensed Administrators who have worked under a Temporary Permit, the three years will be calculated beginning the effective date of the temporary permit.
As used in this Rule, consecutive employment means the uninterrupted or continuous employment with a Mississippi licensed nursing home facility. The phrase "three (3) consecutive years of employment" means the three-year period immediately prior to or preceding the filing of the registration form with the Board to become a Preceptor. Continuous service (employment) shall cease if a person has a break in service. A person experiences a break in service (employment) when he or she is not employed in Mississippi as an Administrator in a licensed nursing home, Assistant Administrator in a licensed nursing home, or an Administrator who has direct management responsibility over one or more nursing homes or more than one administrator for more than ninety (90) days (during the three-year period prescribed by this Rule).
Where a person's last three years of employment are not continuous because of a break in service or otherwise, the period of employment after the break in service (employment) will be treated as new employment and will not be counted toward the three (3) years of consecutive employment required by this Rule.
A Nursing Home Administrator will also be considered for preceptorship who has direct management responsibility over one or more nursing homes or more than one administrator for the three-year period of time set forth above; has completed Board-approved training for certification as a preceptor in Mississippi; and currently must obtain certified certification as a preceptor by the Board. *
No preceptor certification shall be issued or granted to any person who has had a disciplinary action taken against his or her professional license within the three (3) years prior to date on which his or her eligibility as a preceptor is considered by the Board; who has resigned or surrendered his or her professional license in lieu of disciplinary action or while under investigation or while disciplinary action is pending. The Board may also refuse to grant a preceptor certification to an individual who has a pending or unresolved complaint or investigation against his or her license; who has disciplinary action, sanctions, order, or agreement pending or in effect against his or her professional license; and/or whose license is in any way restricted or otherwise subject to disciplinary action.
*Note: Preceptor Certification training is offered annually by the Board for nursing home administrators eligible to serve as preceptors in Mississippi. Preceptor certification is effective July 1st for a period of two (2) years and is renewable biennially, as long as other criteria are met.
The evaluation form must include the following: length of training period, description of training activities, evaluation of trainee's performance, trainee's evaluation of training received, and signatures of the Preceptor and trainee. The evaluation forms must be received in the Mississippi Board's office within fifteen (15) calendar days of the completed training period. Any required form or report which is received in the Board's office thirty (30) days after the end of the applicable reporting period will result in the internship being terminated.
30 Miss. Code. R. 2703-1.3