Ordinarily, the planning and management of a treatment plan which does not involve
                  the furnishing of skilled services requires the skills of a nurse only where the facts
                  of the case establish that the aggregate of such unskilled services, when considered
                  in light of the patient's condition, necessitates the regular daily involvement of
                  a licensed nurse to ensure the patient's recovery and/or medical safety.
               
               For example, an aged patient with a history of diabetes mellitus and angina pectoris
                  is recovering from an open reduction of a fracture of the neck of the femur. They
                  require, among other services, careful skin care, appropriate oral medication, a diabetic
                  diet, a therapeutic exercise program to preserve muscle tone and body condition, and
                  observation to notice signs of deterioration in their condition or complications resulting
                  from their restricted mobility. Although any one of the required services could be
                  performed by a properly instructed unskilled person, such a person would not have
                  the capability of understanding the relationship among the services and their effect
                  on each other. Since the nature of the patient's condition, their age, and their immobility
                  create a high potential for serious complications, such an understanding is essential
                  to assure the patient's recovery and safety.
               
               Under these circumstances, the management of such a plan requires the skills of a
                  nurse, even though each individual service it involves is normally unskilled.