Wash. Admin. Code § 388-877A-0280 - Crisis mental health services-Emergency involuntary detention services
Emergency involuntary detention services are services provided by a designated mental health professional (DMHP) to evaluate an individual in crisis and determine if involuntary services are required.
An agency providing emergency involuntary detention services must:
(1) Ensure that
services are provided by a DMHP.
(2) Ensure staff members are available
twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.
(3) Ensure staff members utilize the
protocols for DMHPs required by
RCW
71.05.214.
(4) Have a written agreement with a certified
inpatient evaluation and treatment facility to allow admission of an individual
twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.
(5) Have a plan for training, staff back-up,
information sharing, and communication for a staff member who responds to a
crisis in a private home or a nonpublic setting.
(6) Ensure that a DMHP is able to be
accompanied by a second trained individual when responding to a crisis in a
private home or a nonpublic setting.
(7) Ensure that a DMHP who engages in a home
visit to a private home or a nonpublic setting is provided by their employer
with a wireless telephone, or comparable device, for the purpose of emergency
communication as described in
RCW
71.05.710.
(8) Provide staff members, who are sent to a
private home or other private location to evaluate an individual in crisis,
prompt access to information about any history of dan-gerousness or potential
dangerousness on the individual they are being sent to evaluate that is
documented in a crisis plan(s) or commitment record(s). This information must
be made available without unduly delaying the crisis response.
(9) Require that a mental health professional
remain with the individual in crisis in order to provide stabilization and
support until the crisis is resolved or referral to another service is
accomplished.
(10) Have a written
protocol for the transportation of an individual, in a safe and timely manner,
for the purpose of medical evaluation or detention.
(11) Ensure that when a peace officer or DMHP
escorts an individual to a facility, the DMHP takes reasonable precautions to
safeguard the individual's property including:
(a) Safeguarding the individual's property in
the immediate vicinity of the point of apprehension;
(b) Safeguarding belongings not in the
immediate vicinity if there may be possible danger to those belongings;
and
(c) Taking reasonable
precautions to lock and otherwise secure the individual's home or other
property as soon as possible after the individual's initial
detention.
(12) Document
services provided to the individual, and other applicable information. At a
minimum this must include:
(a) That the
individual was advised of their rights in accordance with
RCW
71.05.360.
(b) That if the evaluation was conducted in a
hospital emergency department or inpatient unit, it occurred in accordance with
the timelines required by
RCW
71.05.050, 71.05.-153, and
71.34.710.
(c) That the DMHP
conducting the evaluation considered both of the following when evaluating the
individual:
(i) The imminent likelihood of
serious harm or imminent danger because of being gravely disabled (see
RCW
71.05.153); and
(ii) The likelihood of serious harm or grave
disability that does not meet the imminent standard for the emergency detention
(see RCW
71.05.150).
(d) That the DMHP documented consultation
with any examining emergency room physician as required by
RCW
71.05.154.
(e) If the individual was not detained:
(i) A description of the disposition and
follow-up plan; and
(ii)
Documentation that the minor's parent was informed of their right to request a
court review of the DMHP's decision not to detain the minor under
RCW
71.34.710, if the individual is a minor
thirteen years of age or older.
(f) If the individual was detained, a
petition for initial detention must include the following:
(i) The circumstances under which the
person's condition was made known.
(ii) Evidence, as a result of the DMHP's
personal observation or investigation, that the actions of the person for which
application is made constitute a likelihood of serious harm, or that the
individual is gravely disabled.
(iii) Evidence that the individual will not
voluntarily seek appropriate treatment.
(iv) Consideration of all reasonably
available information from credible witnesses, to include family members,
landlords, neighbors, or others with significant contact and history of
involvement with the individual, and records, as required by
RCW
71.05.212.
(v) Consideration of the individual's history
of judicially required, or administratively ordered, anti-psychotic medications
while in confinement when conducting an evaluation of an offender under
RCW
72.09.370.
(g) Documentation that the individual, or the
individual's guardian or conservator, received a copy of the following:
(i) Notice of detention;
(ii) Notice of rights; and
(iii) Initial petition.
Notes
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