Source: http://delcode.delaware.gov/sessionlaws/ga138/chp222.shtml
Timestamp: 2013-12-07 20:21:41
Document Index: 56892750

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 5161', '§ 5161', '§ 5135', '§ 468', '§ 5127', '§ 5001', '§ 1448', '§ 5162', '§ 342', '§ 1131', '§ 5001', '§ 5136']

Citizen Participation	CHAPTER 222
Section 1. Amend Title 16, Chapter 51, Subchapter V of the Delaware Code, by striking the existing § 5161 in its entirety and substituting in lieu thereof the following:
"§ 5161. Rights of patients in mental health hospitals or residential centers.
(1) 'Department' means the Department of Health and Social Services, except that Department means the Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families for facilities certified under § § 5135 and 5001(2) of this title.
(2) For purposes of persons admitted pursuant to Chapter 55 of this title, the term 'treatment' includes habilitation and the term 'patient' means resident.
(b) Any hospital or residential center that admits persons pursuant to Chapters 50, 51, or 55 of this title shall prominently post in English and Spanish the list of patients rights set forth in this subsection. In addition to the posting, the Department shall distribute a copy of the list to each patient and to other persons, as provided in Department regulations. Each patient shall have the following rights:
(1) Each patient shall receive care and treatment suited to his or her needs, skillfully, safely, and humanely administered with full respect for the patient's dignity and personal integrity. The care and treatment shall be provided in a setting and under conditions that restrict the patient's personal liberty only to the extent required by the patient's treatment needs, applicable law, and judicial orders.
(2) Each patient shall have an outcome-oriented, individualized, written treatment plan; treatment based on such plan; periodic review or revision of the plan consistent with treatment progress; and a description of treatment and other support services that may be needed upon discharge.
(3) Each patient, and if the patient is a minor, the patient's parents or legal guardian, shall have the right to ongoing participation, in a manner appropriate to the patient's capabilities, in the development and revision of an individualized treatment plan. In furtherance of this right, each patient, and, if the patient is a minor, the patient's parents-or legal guardian, shall minimally be provided with a reasonable explanation of the following:
a. The patient's general mental condition and, if a facility has provided a physical examination, the patient's general physical condition;
b. The objectives of treatment and the reasons why a particular treatment is considered appropriate;
c. The expected benefits and risks of recommended treatments, including all significant potential adverse effects and the steps which may be taken to obviate or ameliorate such effects;
d. The nature, duration, and expected benefits and risks of any alternative treatments that are available.
(4) Prior to discharge, the facility shall prepare a written continuing care plan developed in consultation with interdisciplinary staff anticipated post-discharge providers, and the patient, and, if the patient is a minor, with the patient's parents or legal guardian. At a minimum, Departmental community-based services staff shall be consulted for adult patients in Departmental facilities. The continuing care plan shall include:
a. a realistic assessment of the patient's post-discharge social, financial, vocational, housing, and treatment needs;
a. identification of available support services and provider linkages necessary to meet the assessed needs; and
b. identification and a timetable of discrete, predischarge activities necessary to promote the patient's successful transition to the community-based services system or to another appropriate post-discharge setting.
(5) Absent a patient's informed, voluntary, written consent to a mode or course of treatment, each patient shall have the right not to receive the mode or course of treatment established pursuant to a treatment plan, except as follows:
a. During an emergency situation, if such treatment is pursuant to and documented contemporaneously by the written order of a physician; or
b. As authorized under applicable law or court order in the case of a person involuntarily committed to the facility; or
c. In the case of a minor, as authorized by a parent or legal guardian.
(6) Each patient shall have the right to be free from the following:
a. Abuse, mistreatment, and neglect, as proscribed by Chapters 9 and I 1 of this title.
b. Unjustifiable force, as defined by I I Del. C § 468;
a. Seclusion, physical restraint, drugs, or other interventions administered primarily for purposes of staff convenience; provided, however, that restraint or seclusion may be administered pursuant to and documented contemporaneously by the written order of an authorized mental health professional, to the extent necessary to prevent physical harm to self or others.
(7) Each patient shall be advised of the availability of any internal and external systems for reporting abuse, neglect, and mistreatment, including those established by Chapters 9 and 11 of this title.
(8) The hospital or residential center shall require:
a. careful reexamination and evaluation of each patient not less than every 6 months;
b, periodic physical examination of each patient by a physician at least once a year;
c. an order of a staff member, operating within the scope of a professional authority and based upon appropriate examination, before any treatment is administered;written, informed consent by the patient, or, if the patient is a minor, a parent or legal guardian, for surgery, electro-convulsive therapy, major medical treatment in the nature of surgery, or the use of research, investigational, or experimental drugs or procedures; and
d. notation in the patient's clinical record, signed by the personnel involved, of periodic examinations, individualized treatment programs, evaluations, reevaluations, and of orders for treatment and specific therapies.
(9) Each patient shall be entitled to communicate freely and privately with persons and groups inside and outside the facility, consistent with the safety and welfare of other patients and with avoiding serious harassment of others. Correspondence initiated to others by the patient shall be sent along promptly without being opened. The facility shall establish procedures to insure that patients have a full opportunity to conduct correspondence, to have reasonable, confidential access to telephones, and, subject to treatment team limitation based on a clinical determination of serious patient harm, to have frequent and convenient opportunities to meet with visitors. Any treatment team's limitation of such patient communication shall be documented in the patient's treatment plan and shall include the team's specific rationale.
(10) A patient's right to retain reasonable personal belongings shall be respected, except that the facility may temporarily retain custody of a patient's personal property for the patient's protection, provided that such property is used or conserved for the support of the patient. The patient is entitled to a receipt for any personal property over which the facility retains temporary custody. Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to relieve any patient from the obligations arising out of § 5127 of this title.
(1 l) Each patient shall have the right to participate in available vocational rehabilitation, community care, or release programs consistent with the patient's treatment plan. It is recognized that work programs can be therapeutic and, therefore, may be included in a patient's individualized treatment plan provided that the following conditions are met:
a. The facility must document in the individualized treatment plan the patient's need or desire for work;
b. The individualized treatment plan must specify the nature of the work to be performed and whether the work is to be voluntary or paid;
c. The patient must consent to the work program described in the treatment plan; and
d. The patient must be aware that he or she may withdraw consent to the work program at any time.
(12) Each patient who, but for a mental disability, would be entitled to attend a public school shall receive the same training and education that he or she would otherwise be entitled to receive in his or her local school district. The facility shall arrange for such training and education, which shall be consistent with the mental ability of the patient, and shall arrange for suitable resources and equipment to address the needs of those patients with visual or hearing impairments.
(13) The hospital or residential center shall maintain a clinical record for each patient admitted. The clinical record shall contain complete information on all matters relating to the admission, legal status, care, and treatment of the patient, and shall include all pertinent documents relating to the patient. Copies of informed consent forms signed by patients or guardians pursuant to paragraph (8)d of this subsection shall be kept with each patient's ward chart. The Department shall, by regulation, determine the scope and method of recording information maintained on the clinical records. Those regulations shall ensure the completeness and accuracy of data pertaining to admission, legal matters affecting the patient, records and notations of the course of care and treatment, therapies, the patient's progress if in research and adverse or other reactions thereto, restrictions on the patient's rights, periodic examinations, and other information required by the Department.
a. To patients, or, if the patient is a minor, to a parent or legal guardian, except that access to specific records may be refused when a clinical determination is made and documented in the patient's individualized treatment plan that such access would be seriously detrimental to the patient's health or treatment progress. In the latter case, such material may be made available to a licensed mental health professional selected by the patient, and that professional may, in the exercise of professional judgment, provide the patient with access to any or all parts of the denied material or otherwise disclose the information contained therein. Whenever records arc released in accordance with this paragraph, the recipient shall have the right to review the record with a mental health professional furnished by the facility;
b. Pursuant to an order of a court of record;
c. To attorneys representing the patient;
d. To rights-protection agencies otherwise entitled to access under applicable federal or State law or implementing interagency agreement, including the Office of the Long-term Care Ombudsman and designated programs under the federal Protection and Advocacy for Mentally Ill Individuals Act and Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act, as amended;
e. With the consent of the patient, or, if the patient is a minor, with the consent of a parent or legal guardian;
f To Departmental contractors to the extent necessary for professional consultation or services;
g. To the State Bureau of Identification pursuant to subsection (14) of this section and 11 Del. r. 8509; and
(14) The Delaware State Hospital and any other hospital as defined in 16 Del. C. § 5001(2) shall submit to the State Bureau of Identification, pursuant to 11 Del. C, § 1448A, the name, date of birth, and social security number of any adult who is involuntarily committed to such facility.
(15) Each patient, and, if the patient is a minor, the minor's parent or legal guardian, shall have the right to assert grievances with respect to infringement ofthe rights described in this section, including the right to have such grievances considered in a fair, timely, and impartial grievance procedure provided for or by the facility. Without diminution of such right, the facility may also establish a supplemental mediation system to resolve grievances.
(16) Each patient, and, if the patient is a minor, the minor's parent or legal guardian, shall have a right to confidential access to any internal rights protection office established by the facility and to any State or federally authorized mental health ombudsman or rights protection agency.
(17) Each patient shall have the right to exercise the rights described in this section without reprisal, including reprisal in the form of denial of any appropriate, available treatment.
(18) Nothing in this section or in any rule or regulation adopted pursuant thereto shall be construed to deny treatment by spiritual means through prayer for any patient detained for evaluation or treatment who desires spiritual treatment, or to a minor, if the minor's parent or guardian desires such treatment.
(19) Consistent with the nature of the right and applicable law, a right may devolve to the patient's guardian.
(20) The rights described above are in addition to, and not in derogation of any other statutory or constitutional rights."
Section 2. Amend § 5162 of Title 16 of the Delaware Code by striking the final sentence and substituting in lieu thereof the following: "Notwithstanding 10 Del C, § 342, the Court of Chancery shall have jurisdiction over all actions, including those requesting declaratory relief, to enforce or resolve disputes concerning the rights arising out of this subchapter."
Section 3. Amend § 1131 of Title 16 of the Delaware Code by striking subsection (4) in its entirety and substituting in lieu thereof the following:
"(4) 'Facility' shall include:
c. The Delaware State Hospital and hospitals certified by the Department of Health and Social Services pursuant to 16 Del C, § 5001 or § 5136."
Section 4. Amend Section 1134 of Title 16 of the Delaware Code by adding the following sentence at the end of Subsection (1): "If not otherwise prohibited by law, the results of the investigation shall be shared with the reporter, the patient or resident, and, if applicable, with the guardian of the patient or resident."
Approved July 14, 1995.	Last Updated: November 27 2013 14:53:15.	site map | about this site | contact us | translate | delaware.gov