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Advance Directives For Behavioral Health Care . Materials used with Permission From the National Resource Center on Psychiatric Advance Directives. NJ Division of Mental Health Services UMDNJ-University Behavioral HealthCare June 2007. What are Psychiatric Advance Directives (PAD’s)?.
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Advance Directives For Behavioral Health Care Materials used with Permission From the National Resource Center on Psychiatric Advance Directives NJ Division of Mental Health Services UMDNJ-University Behavioral HealthCare June 2007
What are Psychiatric Advance Directives (PAD’s)? • Legal documents that allow persons when of “sound mind” • To refuse or give consent to future psychiatric treatment. • May authorize another person to make future decisions about mental health care on behalf of the mentally ill person, if he/she becomes incapacitated.
What does it do? • Helps consumers control treatment decisions • Helps families assist their loved ones in crisis • States preferences • Provides care guidelines • Supports all concerned parties • Consumer • Family and other supporters • Treatment providers
Goal of an Advance Directive • To ensure patients are treated according with their wishes. • To encourage a more informed and open dialogue between patients and their treatment providers.
Why Are PAD’s Important • Patent Self-Determination Act (PSDA) of 1990 requires hospitals and clinics to assist in the use of Medical Advance Directives (‘living wills”). • In states with PAD’s laws, the PSDA requires hospital and clinics to assist in their use. • New Jersey has a PAD law called the “New Jersey Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Act”.
Why Are PAD’s Important • Allows families to speak directly with providers during crisis. • Allows families help make decisions during crisis. • Still supports consumer autonomy and empowerment in mental health care. • May reduce involuntary treatment. • May improve continuity of care.
The Information in PAD’s • Crisis symptoms • Medication choice • Hospital choice • Emergency contacts • Relapse and protective factors • Instructions to staff • Other instructions
The Potential of PAD’s • PAD’s can • Empower the consumer • Enhance communications • Facilitate timely interventions • Reduce adversarial litigation
Two Parts to PAD’s • Instructional Directive: • Similar to a living will. • Documents wishes, consent or refusal of future care. • Health Care Power of Attorney: • Appoints another person to make decisions during crisis. • May be designed with limited or broad powers. • Not required to have either. • Can choose to have both.
Instructional Directives • Usually permits individual to plan for, consent to, or refuse: • Hospital admission • Medications • Electroconvulsive treatment • Other treatments for mental illness. • Takes effect in the event individual loses ability to make decisions (is “incapable”).
Instructional Directives:May include additional information • Who to contact in case of a crisis. • What may cause a mental health crisis. • What may help a person to avoid hospitalization. • How the person generally reacts to hospitalization. • Other instructions.
Making an Instructional Directive • Any adult “of sound mind” can make. • Must be in writing. • Signed in presence of one witness: • Not a relative. • Not person’s doctor, mental health provider or other staff. • Not staff of a health care facility which the client is a patient. • Present to doctor and other mental treatment providers.
What should the doctors or staff do with the Instructional Directive? • Must make a part of medical record. • Must act in accordance with instructional directive when patient is determined to be “lack of decision making capacity”. • May notify all other providers to follow instructional directive.
What does “Lacking in Decision Making Capacity” Mean? • …in the opinion of two responsible mental healthcare professionals the person currently lacks sufficient understanding or capacity to make and communicate mental health treatment decisions.”
Must clinicians always honor the instructions? • Clinicians may disregard instructions: • Not consistent with “generally accepted community practice standards.” • When treatment requests are not feasible or unavailable. • When treatment requests would interfere with treating an emergency. • Instructions may be over-ridden by involuntary inpatient commitment. • Conflicts with other law.
If one instruction is not followed, what happens to other instructions? Generally: • If one part of the instructions cannot be carried out, the remaining instructions must still be followed. • If not followed, reason for not following instruction must be communicated and documented.
Can the instructions be changed? • Generally: These documents can be changed or revoked at any time by notifying the physician or treatment team, revising the document, or by destroying the document.
Health Care Power of Attorney (HCPA) • Allows a person to appoint someone to make treatment decisions when it has been determined that the consumer lacks decision making capacity. Can be combined with instructional directive. • But may be two different forms. • Any capable adult may execute.
Health Care Power of Attorney • Someone the consumer trust… • Someone to negotiate consumer care… • When consumer cannot.
Who can serve as the health care power of attorney? • Any competent adult 18 or older. • Person usually cannot be providing health care to consumer. • Consumer can name several people to serve if one unavailable.
When does health care power of attorney take effect? • When consumer is found to be lacking in decision making capacity and continues during period of incapacity. • Determined by two mental health professionals. • Must document decision of lacking decision making capacity.
What powers does the health care power of attorney have? • Can make whatever treatment decisions the consumer could usually make; • Unless the consumer limits the authority of the health care power of attorney. • Consumer can instruct health care power of attorney on decision about medications, ECT, hospital admission, other.
What should the health care power of attorney do? • Must make decisions consistent with any statements in instructional directive, if one exists. • Can discuss and review treatment information. • Can usually consent/refuse admission to hospital. • Can usually consent/refuse medication and ETC.
Examples of Use of PADs • Advance informed consent to future hospitalization in the event of incapacitating mental health crisis. • Request or refuse future treatment with medications or other interventions. • Authorize health care power of attorney to make future decisions about psychiatric treatment in patient’s best interest.
Why don’t more consumers have PADs? • Families have not realized they should encourage them! • Fewer than half of states have these laws. • Some states allow pads under medical advance directives. • Advance directives may be difficult to complete for some consumers. • Help in completing advance directives may not always be available.
Where can I get more information about PADs? • New Jersey Division of Mental Health Services www.state.nj.us/humanservices/dmhs/index.html • National Resource Center on Psychiatric Advance Directives www.nrc-pad.org • Bazelon Center www.bazelon.org • NAMI www.nami.org • National Mental Health Association www.nmha.org