Karen A. DeSousa
Office of the Attorney General
Significantly expanded Health Care
Decisions Act to permit advance directives beyond end of life decisions and appointment of health care agent to include instructions for all health care decisions, including mental health care and MH facility admissions
Modified the law governing situations in which patients with decisional incapacity object to treatment
Before 2009, an incapacitated person could not be admitted to a mental health facility by a legally authorized representative. The only legal route of admission was civil commitment
New § 37.2-805.1 section permits an agent appointed in advance directive or a guardian to admit incapacitated person to MH facility for up to 10 days if:
Physician on staff or designated by admitting facility examines person and makes specific findings in writing
CSB pre-admission screening required for admission to DBHDS facilities
§ 37.2-805.1
Physician on staff or with privileges at MH facility must examine person and find in writing that person:
Has a mental illness
Is incapable of making an informed decision, as defined in HCDA, regarding admission
Is in need of treatment in MH facility
Facility is willing to admit person, and
§ 37.2-805.1
For Health Care Agent Admissions:
Person has executed advance directive in accordance with HCDA authorizing his agent to consent to his admission, and
If protesting admission, given specific authorization for agent to make decisions even in event of his protest (‘Ulysses clause”)
For Guardian Admissions:
Guardianship order specifically authorizes guardian to consent to admission to MH facility
§ 37.2-805.1
Order must find by clear and convincing evidence:
Person has severe and persistent mental illness significantly impairing person’s capacity to exercise judgment or self-control, as confirmed by evaluation of psychiatrist
Person’s condition unlikely to improve in foreseeable future, and
Guardian has formulated plan for providing ongoing treatment of person’s illness in least restrictive setting
§§ 37.2-805.1, 37.2-1009
Guardian may not have professional relationship with incapacitated person or be employed by or affiliated with facility where person resides
If admission exceeds 10 days, person must be ordered to involuntary inpatient admission under § 37.2-817 (note: ECO/TDO not necessary)
§ 37.2-1009
Declarant may authorize agent to consent to his admission to mental health facility for no more than 10 days provided declarant does not protest admission at that time and physician makes necessary findings in §
37.2-805.1
Declarant may authorize his admission to mental health facility over his protest, but only if declarant’s physician or clinical psychologist attests in the advance directive that declarant is capable of making informed decision and understands consequences of this provision
§ 54.1-2984
Prior to the legislative changes, the HCDA did not authorize providing, continuing, withholding or withdrawing treatment if the treatment provider knew such action was protested by the patient, even if the patient was incapacitated at the time .
Authority to treat over protest in the MH context came instead from either:
Judicial authorization, although ECT or antipsychotic medication can only be ordered over protest if the person is also subject to an order of involuntary admission; or
Consent of an authorized representative appointed under the human rights regulations, but only following
LHRC review; or
Consent of a guardian, who must consider the incapacitated person’s expressed desires to the extent known and feasible
Authority to treat over protest for providers not licensed, operated or funded by the
DBHDS was less clear:
Consent of a guardian, who must consider the incapacitated person’s expressed desires to the extent known and feasible
Judicial authorization for treatment if no legally authorized representative available to give consent
New section 54.1-2986.2 now allows treatment over protest under the HCDA in two circumstances:
(B) If a patient who is incapable of making an informed decision protests a health care recommendation that is otherwise authorized by his advance directive, his agent may make a decision consistent with the advance directive over the patient's protest if:
1. The decision does not involve withholding or withdrawing life-prolonging procedures;
2. The patient's advance directive explicitly states that the provisions of his advance directive regarding the specific decision at issue should govern, even over his later protest;
3. The patient's advance directive was signed by the patient's attending physician or licensed clinical psychologist who attested that the patient was capable of making an informed decision and understood the consequences of the provision; and
4. The health care that is to be provided, continued, withheld or withdrawn is determined and documented by the patient's attending physician to be medically appropriate and is otherwise permitted by law.
Or….
(C) If a patient who is incapable of making an informed decision protests a health care recommendation, his agent, or person authorized to make decisions by § 54.1-2986, may make a decision over the patient's protest if:
1. The decision does not involve withholding or withdrawing lifeprolonging procedures;
2. The health care decision is based, to the extent known, on the patient's religious beliefs and basic values and on any preferences previously expressed by the patient regarding such health care or, if they are unknown, is in the patient's best interests; and
3. The health care that is to be provided, continued, withheld, or withdrawn has been affirmed and documented as being ethically acceptable by the health care facility's ethics committee, if one exists, or otherwise by two physicians not currently involved in the patient's care, or in the determination of the patient's capacity to make health care decisions.
If a patient protests the authority of a named agent or any person authorized to make health care decisions by
§ 54.1-2986, except for the patient's guardian, the protested individual has no authority under the HCDA to make health care decisions on his behalf unless the patient's advance directive explicitly confers continuing authority on his agent, even over his later protest.
If the protested individual is denied authority under this subsection, authority to make health care decisions shall be determined by any other provisions of the patient's advance directive, or in accordance with § 54.1-2986.
Provisions of Health Care Decisions Act do not alter or limit authority that otherwise exists under common law, statutes or regulations of
Commonwealth
Of a health care provider to provide health care, or
Of a person’s agent, guardian or other legally authorized representative to make decisions on behalf of incapacitated person e.g., guardianship, judicial authorization for treatment, Human Rights Regulations
§ 54.1-2992
For those providers licensed, operated or funded by the DBHDS, however, the human rights regulations still apply (12
VAC 35-115 et. seq), and they prohibit treatment over protest based on an agent’s consent unless certain conditions are met.
There is a right to LHRC review pursuant to 12 VAC 35-115-200.
A TDO is issued for a patient who meets commitment criteria, but whose AD expressly forbids admission to a psychiatric facility.
What should the provider do?
Can this person be admitted?
HCDA amended to provide that provisions in
Chapter 8 of Title 37.2 apply, notwithstanding any contrary instruction in advance directive
Advance directive may be used to authorize admission of patient to a mental health facility, only if admission is otherwise authorized under
Chapter 8 of Title 37.2
I.e., admission procedures in Title 37.2 control over
Advance Directive
§ 54.1-2983.3
The same scenario as Vignette One, but the person’s AD only precludes commitment to Hospital A. Hospital A is the only facility available at this time.
Can the person be admitted to Hospital A?
A patient admitted under a TDO has lost control and is a danger to himself and others, engaging in dangerous behaviors on the unit. His AD says “NO forced medication,” and he is objecting.
Can forced medication be given?
Under what circumstances?
The patient is experiencing marked psychotic symptoms and it is felt that treatment with an antipsychotic medication is medically necessary, although the situation is not an emergency. The patient’s AD forbids all medication over objection, and he is objecting.
What should the provider do?
Is there a way this medication can be given?
What changes if there is no authorized representative?
What changes if the patient is not involuntarily admitted?
The patient is involuntarily admitted and has an AD precluding treatment with drug
A, but specifically authorizing treatment with drug B.
Which drug should be given?
What if drug B is clinically inappropriate?
How does your answer change if it is an emergency?
A patient with severe dementia resides in a nursing home. He needs antibiotic treatment for an infected decubitus ulcer, but he refuses to take any medication or allow IV lines to be inserted, even though he does not understand the nature of his medical condition or the need for treatment. His decisional capacity is severely impaired, but his wife is prepared to authorize the antibiotic therapy. What should be done?
A patient who has just been hospitalized for an acute traumatic brain injury from a motor vehicle accident is seriously agitated and disoriented. He is confabulating
(thinking that the medical staff are prison guards) and he has no recognition that his cognition is impaired. He just wants to leave in order to return home and to work. The medical unit is not locked, and he has twice attempted to leave the hospital. The first time, the nursing staff was able to persuade him to return to his room, but the second time, security needed to be called. No family members are available.