Intermediate Care Facilities (ICFs) for the Developmentally Delayed/Subacute Care

Intermediate Care Facilities (ICFs) for the Developmentally Delayed/Subacute Care

ICFs are facilities where people of all ages with developmental disabilities live and receive:

  • Health care services
  • Life skills training
  • Vocational training

ICFs help members who do not reside with family live the most independent, productive, fulfilling life possible. 

Because they provide some nursing and medical care on-site, ICFs are licensed by the Department of Health Care Services.

Subacute Care:

Subacute care patients are medically fragile and require special services, such as inhalation therapy, tracheostomy care, intravenous feeding, and complex wound management care. 

Adult subacute care is defined as a level of care needed by a patient who does not require hospital acute care but who requires more intensive care than is provided in a skilled nursing facility. 

Pediatric subacute care is a level of care needed by a person less than 21 years of age who uses a medical technology that compensates for the loss of a vital bodily function. 

For more information, you can call Member Services.