Or. Admin. R. 309-033-0640 - Involuntary Administration of Significant Procedures to a Committed Person With Good Cause
(1)
Hospitals or nonhospital facilities authorized. Only the following facilities
that serve committed persons shall involuntarily administer significant
procedures with good cause under the provisions of 309-033-0640:
(a) A hospital or nonhospital facility
approved under OAR 309-033-0700 through 309-033-0740, Approval of Hospitals and
Nonhospital Facilities To Provide Seclusion and Restraint to Committed Persons
and to Persons in Custody or on Diversion.
(b) A hospital or nonhospital facility
approved under OAR 309-033-0530, Approval of Hospitals and Nonhospital
Facilities To Provide Services to Committed Persons and to Persons in Custody
or on Diversion.
(c) Secure
residential facilities licensed by the Division or licensed by the
APD.
(d) Intermediate care
facilities or enhanced care facilities licensed by APD which have a variance
from APD to provide involuntary medication.
(2) Good cause. Good cause exists to
administer a significant procedure to a person committed to the Division
without informed consent if, in the opinion of the treating physician, after
consultation with the treatment team:
(a) The
person is deemed unable pursuant to OAR 309-033-0620 to consent to, refuse,
withhold or withdraw consent to the significant procedure.
(b) The proposed significant procedure will
likely restore, or prevent deterioration of, the person's mental or physical
health, alleviate extreme suffering, or save or extend the person's
life.
(c) The proposed significant
procedure is the most appropriate treatment for the person's condition
according to current clinical practice, and all other less intrusive procedures
have been considered and all criteria and information set forth in OAR
309-033-0620, Procedures for Obtaining Informed Consent and Information to be
Given, are considered.
(d) The
treating physician has made a conscientious effort to obtain informed consent
to the significant procedure from the person.
(3) Independent review. Prior to granting
approval for the administration of a significant procedure for good cause to a
person committed to the Division, the administrator shall obtain consultation
and approval from an independent examining physician.
(a) The administrator shall maintain a list
of independent examining physicians and shall seek consultation and approval
from independent examining physicians selected on a rotating basis from the
list. The independent examining physician shall:
(A) Be a psychiatrist;
(B) Not be in a position to provide primary
or on-call care or treatment to the person who is subject of the independent
review;
(C) Not be an employee of
the facility;
(D) Have been
subjected to review by medical staff executive committee as to qualifications
to make such an examination; and
(E) Have read and received training from the
medical staff regarding the meaning and the application of these
rules.
(b) Prior to
seeking consultation and approval of an examining physician, the administrator
shall provide written notice to the committed person who is subject to the
proposed significant procedure without the person's consent.
(4) Independent physician
activities. The physician selected to conduct the independent consultation
shall:
(a) Review the person's clinical
record, including the records of efforts made to obtain the person's informed
consent;
(b) Personally examine the
person;
(c) Interview the person to
determine the extent of the need for the procedure and the nature of the
person's refusal, withholding, or withdrawal or inability to consent to the
significant procedure;
(d) Consider
additional information, if any, presented prior to or at the time of
examination or interview as may be requested by the person; and
(e) Make a determination whether the factors
required under these rules exist for the particular person or that one or more
factors are not present. If the physician determines that the person does not
have capacity to give consent to treatment, the physician shall review the
proposed significant procedure. The physician shall make his/her determination
of capacity, approval or disapproval of the proposed significant procedure to:
(A) The administrator; and
(B) The person to whom a significant
procedure is proposed to be administered, with a copy being made part of the
person's record.
(5) Administrator determination. The
administrator shall approve or disapprove of the administration of the
significant procedure to a person committed to the Division based on good
cause, provided:
(a) The administrator shall
not approve the significant procedure and it shall not be performed when the
independent examining physician found that one or more of the factors required
by OAR 309-033-0640 were not present or otherwise disapproved of the
procedure.
(b) Approval of the
significant procedure shall terminate if there is a substantial increase in
risk, as determined by a physician, of administering the significant procedure
or at any time the person regains capacity to give informed consent/refusal.
Approval of the significant procedure shall terminate at the end of the
person's commitment but in no case longer than 180 days. Disapproval shall be
only so long as no substantial change occurs in the person's
condition.
(c) Written notice of
the administrator's determination shall be provided to the person and made part
of the committed person's clinical records.
(d) A copy of the independent examining
physician's report shall be made part of the committed person's clinical
record.
(6) Ninety-day
right to review. The administrator shall adopt procedures which assure that the
committed person may request independent review of the approval once every
ninety days after the initial approval. Within 14 days of a verbal or written
request from the committed person, the administrator shall initiate an
independent review of the approval, as in OAR 309-033-0640.
(7) Transfer of approval. The administrator,
or the superintendent of a State hospital, shall transfer the approval of the
administration of a significant procedure when a committed person is
transferred to another hospital or nonhospital facility described in OAR
309-033-0640.
(a) The administrator, or the
superintendent, of the sending hospital or nonhospital facility shall transfer
the approval by sending copies of all approval documents to the administrator
of the receiving facility.
(b) The
administrator, or the superintendent, of the receiving hospital or nonhospital
facility shall assure that the treating physician at that facility reexamines
the committed person and verifies that the need for the approval continues to
exist as described in OAR 309-033-0620, Procedures for Obtaining Informed
Consent and Information to be Given, and 309-033-0640, Good Cause. The
receiving hospital or nonhospital facility may administer the significant
procedure if the need for the procedure continues in accordance with OAR
309-033-0640, Involuntary Administration of Significant Procedures to a
Committed Person with Good Cause.
(c) In no event shall the approval of a
significant procedure continue beyond 180 days from the date of the original
approval without reestablishing the need for the approval by following the
procedures prescribed in OAR 309-033-0640, Involuntary Administration of
Significant Procedures to Committed Persons with Good Cause.
(8) Administrative procedures.
(a) Utilization summary. Every four months
the administrator shall make a summary of the use of OAR 309-033-0630 and
309-033-0640 that includes:
(A) Each type of
proposed significant procedure for which consultation with an independent
examining physician was sought;
(B)
The number of times consultation was sought from a particular independent
examining physician or disposition board for each type of proposed significant
procedure;
(C) The number of times
each independent examining physician approved and disapproved each type of
proposed significant procedure; and
(D) The number of times the approved and
disapproved each type of proposed significant procedure.
(b) Outside reviewer's access to summaries.
The administrator shall provide a copy of a utilization summary to the
federally-mandated advocacy and protection agency for Oregon, which is
appointed by the Governor and which currently is the Oregon Advocacy Center,
and the Division. The Division may only distribute the report to any other
person or organization authorized by the Division which in the opinion of the
Assistant Administrator:
(A) Has substantial
interest in the advocacy and protection of the rights of persons with mental
illness; and
(B) Whose access to
the summaries will provide a substantial and material benefit to the citizens
of Oregon.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 413.042 & 426.385
Stats. Implemented: ORS 426.005 - 426.395
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