Louisiana 2018 2018 Regular Session

Louisiana Senate Bill SB306 Introduced / Bill

                    SLS 18RS-484	ORIGINAL
2018 Regular Session
SENATE BILL NO. 306
BY SENATOR BARROW 
MENTAL HEALTH.  Provides relative to Assistive Outpatient Treatment. (8/1/18)
1	AN ACT
2 To amend and reenact R.S. 28:66(A)(6) and (B), 67(1) and (2), 68, 69(A)(1) and (2), (C) and
3 (D), 70(A), (C), (D), and (E), 71(B), (C), (D), (E), and (F), 72 , 73, and 75, to enact
4 R.S. 28:69(A)(3), 70(F), and 76, relative to assistive outpatient mental health
5 treatment; to provide for the pertinence of advance directives; to provide for who
6 may initiate a petition for involuntary outpatient treatment; to provide for matters
7 relating to a hearing on such a petition; to provide for assessments of the patient and
8 who is to perform assessments; to provide relative to physician affidavits; to provide
9 relative to a treatment plan; to provide for notice to particular persons of any hearing
10 to determine if involuntary outpatient treatment is necessary; to provide relative to
11 additional periods of treatment; to provide for who is to receive notice of any petition
12 to vacate an order for involuntary commitment; and to provide for related matters.
13 Be it enacted by the Legislature of Louisiana:
14 Section 1.  R.S. 28:66(A)(6) and (B), 67(1) and (2), 68, 69(A)(1) and (2), (C) and
15 (D), 70(A), (C), (D), and (E), 71(B), (C), (D), (E), and (F), 72, 73, and 75 are hereby
16 amended and reenacted and R.S. 28:69(A)(3), 70(F), and 76 are hereby enacted to read as
17 follows:
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1 §66. Criteria for civil involuntary outpatient treatment
2	A.  A patient may be ordered to obtain civil involuntary outpatient treatment
3 if the court finds that all of the following conditions apply:
4	*          *          *
5	(6)  In view of the treatment history and current behavior of the patient, the
6 patient is in need of involuntary outpatient treatment to prevent a relapse or
7 deterioration which would be likely to result in the patient becoming dangerous to
8 self or others or gravely disabled as defined in R.S. 28:2.
9	B.  Advance directives.  (1) If the patient has executed an advance directive
10 as defined in R.S. 28:221, any directions included in the directive shall be taken into
11 account by the court in determining the written treatment plan.
12	(2) Nothing herein shall preclude a person with an advance directive from
13 being subject to a petition pursuant to this Part.
14 §67. Petition to the court
15	A petition for an order authorizing involuntary outpatient treatment may be
16 filed in the judicial district in the parish in which the patient is present or reasonably
17 believed to be present. A petition to obtain an order authorizing involuntary
18 outpatient treatment may be initiated by one of the following persons:
19	(1) The director, or administrator, or treating physician of a hospital in
20 which the patient is hospitalized.
21	(2) The director, administrator, or treating physician of an emergency
22 receiving center in which the patient is receiving services.
23	*          *          *
24 §68.  Petition
25	A. The petition shall contain the facts which are the basis of the assertion that
26 the patient meets each of the criteria in R.S. 28:66, that he is present or reasonably
27 believed to be present in the parish where filed, and provide the respondent with
28 adequate notice and knowledge relative to the nature of the proceeding.
29	B. The petition shall be accompanied by a Physician's Report to Court or
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1 an affidavit of a physician, psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or
2 psychologist, who shall not be the petitioner, and shall state either of the following:
3	(1) Such physician, psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or
4 psychologist has examined the patient no more than ten days prior to the submission
5 filing of the petition, he recommended involuntary outpatient treatment for the
6 patient, and he is willing and able to testify at the hearing on the petition.
7	(2) No more than ten days prior to the filing of the petition, such physician,
8 psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or psychologist or his designee has made
9 appropriate attempts to elicit the cooperation of the patient but has not been
10 successful in persuading him to submit to an examination, that such physician,
11 psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or psychologist has reason to suspect that
12 the patient meets the criteria for involuntary outpatient treatment, and he is willing
13 and able to examine the patient and testify at the hearing on the petition.
14 §69. Procedure
15	A.  Hearing notice.  (1) Upon the filing of the petition authorized by R.S.
16 28:67, the court shall assign a time and place for a hearing as promptly as is
17 practical, but in no case later than eighteen days after the filing of the petition,
18 which may be conducted before any judge in the judicial district, within five days,
19 and shall cause reasonable notice thereof and a copy of the petition to be served upon
20 the respondent, respondent's attorney, the petitioner and the director of the local
21 governing entity in the parish where the petition has been filed. The notice shall
22 inform the respondent that he has a right to be present, a right to retain counsel,
23 which may be appointed, if he is indigent or otherwise qualified, has the right to
24 counsel appointed to represent him by the Mental Health Advocacy Service, and a
25 right to cross examine witnesses. Continuances shall be granted only for good cause
26 shown.
27	(2) In addition to those persons entitled to notice pursuant to Paragraph (1)
28 of this Subsection, if the respondent is interdicted, notice of the hearing and a copy
29 of the petition shall also be served upon the curator for the interdict and the attorney
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1 who represented the interdict in the interdict proceedings.
2	(3) The court may order the service of all pleadings, notices, and written
3 treatment plans required in this Part pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
4 Article 1212(A), without regard to Article 1313(B).
5	*          *          *
6	C.  The court shall not order involuntary outpatient treatment unless an
7 examining physician, psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or psychologist
8 who has personally examined the patient within the time period commencing ten
9 days before the filing of the petition, testifies at the hearing, in person or via
10 electronic means, with consent of all the parties, regarding the categories of
11 involuntary outpatient treatment recommended, the rationale for each category,
12 facts which establish that such treatment is the least restrictive alternative, and
13 if recommended, the beneficial and detrimental physical and mental effects of
14 medication, and whether such medication should be self-administered or
15 administered by an authorized professional.
16	D. If the patient has refused to be examined by a physician, psychiatric
17 mental health nurse practitioner or psychologist, the court may request order the
18 subject to consent to undergo an examination by a physician, psychiatric mental
19 health nurse practitioner or psychologist appointed by the court. If the patient does
20 not consent refuses to undergo the court-ordered examination and the court finds
21 reasonable cause to believe that the allegations in the petition are true, the court may
22 order peace officers, police officers or the sheriff's department to take the patient into
23 custody and transport him to a hospital or emergency receiving center for
24 examination. Retention of the patient in accordance with the court order shall not
25 exceed twenty-four hours. The examination of the patient may be performed by the
26 physician, psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or psychologist whose
27 affidavit or Physician's Report to Court accompanied the petition pursuant to R.S.
28 28:68(B), if he is privileged or otherwise authorized by the hospital or emergency
29 receiving center. If such examination is performed by another physician, psychiatric
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1 mental health nurse practitioner or psychologist, he shall be authorized to consult
2 with the physician, psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or psychologist
3 whose affidavit or Physician's Report to Court accompanied the petition regarding
4 the issues of whether the allegations in the petition are true and whether the patient
5 meets the criteria for involuntary outpatient treatment.
6	*          *          *
7 §70. Written treatment plan for involuntary outpatient treatment
8	A. The court shall not order involuntary outpatient treatment unless an
9 examining physician, psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner, or psychologist
10 appointed by the appropriate director of the local governing entity develops and
11 provides to the court a proposed written treatment plan. The written treatment plan
12 shall be developed by a treatment team which shall include a case manager, clinical
13 social worker, and licensed physician, psychiatrist, psychiatric mental health nurse
14 practitioner, or psychologist and other specialized service providers as deemed
15 appropriate by the director as well as the patient and upon his request, an individual
16 significant to him and concerned with his welfare. The written treatment plan shall
17 include appropriate services to provide care coordination. Such services shall include
18 case management services or assertive community treatment teams. The written
19 treatment plan shall also include appropriate categories of services, as set forth in
20 Subsection E of this Section, which such team recommends the patient should is
21 recommended to receive and are available to the patient.  The written treatment
22 plan shall specify a provider that has agreed to provide each of the specified
23 services. If the written treatment plan includes medication, it shall state whether the
24 medication should be self-administered or administered by authorized personnel, and
25 shall specify type and dosage range of medication most likely to provide maximum
26 benefit for the patient.
27	*          *          *
28	C.  The plan shall be provided to the court and all persons required to
29 receive notice within R.S. 28:69(A) at least three days before no later than the
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1 date of the hearing on the petition.
2	*          *          *
3	D. The court shall not order involuntary outpatient treatment unless a
4 physician, psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or psychologist testifies
5 regarding the categories of involuntary outpatient treatment recommended, the
6 rationale for each category, facts which establish that such treatment is the least
7 restrictive alternative, and, if recommended, the beneficial and detrimental physical
8 and mental effects of medication, and whether such medication should be self-
9 administered or administered by an authorized professional.
10	E. Services. (1) Services shall include but are not limited to the following:
11	(a) Assertive community treatment.
12	(b)Case case management, provided by the local governing entity which
13 is defined as the assignment of the administration coordination of care for an
14 outpatient individual with a serious mental illness to a single person or team,
15 including all necessary medical and mental health care and associated supportive
16 services.
17	(2) Services may include, but are not limited to, the following categories and
18 will depend upon the availability in the patient's area:
19	(a) Assertive community treatment.
20	(b) Medication.
21	(b)(c) Laboratory testing to include periodic blood testing for therapeutic
22 metabolic effects, toxicology testing and breath analysis.
23	(c)(d) Individual or group therapy.
24	(d)(e) Day or partial day programming activities.
25	(e)(f) Education and vocational rehabilitation training.
26	(f)(g) Substance-related or addictive disorder treatment.
27	(g)(h) Supervised living.
28	(h)(i) Transportation.
29	(j) Housing assistance.
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1	(k) Vocational and employment.
2	E. The director or his designee shall certify that the service ordered in
3 the plan are available and can be reasonably accessed by the patient.
4	F. Treatment plan review.  (1) The written treatment plan is subject to
5 reviews before the court with the patient and at least one representative of the
6 treatment team.  The initial frequency shall be stipulated in the treatment plan
7 and modified with the court's approval.
8	(2) The court order required blood or laboratory testing shall be subject
9 to review after six months by the physician, psychiatric mental health nurse
10 practitioner, or psychologist who developed the written treatment plan or who
11 is designated by the director, and the blood or laboratory testing may be
12 terminated without further action of the court.
13 §71. Disposition
14	*          *          *
15	B. If the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that the patient meets
16 the criteria for involuntary outpatient treatment, and no less restrictive alternative is
17 feasible, the court shall order that the patient receive involuntary outpatient treatment
18 for an initial period not to exceed one year. The court shall state reasons why the
19 proposed treatment plan is the least restrictive treatment appropriate and feasible for
20 the patient. The order shall state the categories of involuntary outpatient treatment
21 as set forth in R.S. 28:70, which the patient is to receive, and the court may not order
22 treatment that has not been recommended by the physician, psychiatric mental health
23 nurse practitioner, or psychologist in consultation with the treatment team and
24 included in the written treatment plan. The plan shall be certified by the director of
25 the local governing entity responsible for services in the district where the petition
26 is filed, as offering services which are available through their offices. The court shall
27 not order an outpatient commitment unless the director so, or designee, certifies that
28 the services are available.
29	C. If the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that the patient meets
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1 the criteria for involuntary outpatient treatment, and a written proposed treatment
2 plan has not been submitted approved, the court shall order the director of the local
3 governing entity to provide a plan and testimony within five days of the date of the
4 order.
5	D. The court may order the patient to self-administer psychotropic drugs or
6 accept order the administration of such drugs by authorized personnel as part of an
7 involuntary outpatient treatment program. The order shall specify the type and
8 dosage range of psychotropic drugs and it shall be effective for the duration of such
9 involuntary outpatient treatment.
10	E. If the petitioner is the director or administrator of affiliated with a hospital
11 that operates an involuntary outpatient treatment program that is willing to treat the
12 patient, the court order shall direct the hospital to provide all available categories
13 of involuntary outpatient treatment services. If the hospital does not have such a
14 program or if the patient is discharged to a different local governing entity, or if the
15 director of the local governing entity has filed the petition and certified services are
16 available, the court order shall require the appropriate director to provide for all
17 available categories of involuntary outpatient treatment services.
18	F. The director treatment provider shall apply for court approval prior to
19 instituting a proposed material change in the involuntary outpatient treatment order
20 unless such change is contemplated in the order. For purposes of this Subsection, a
21 material change shall mean an addition or deletion of a category of involuntary
22 outpatient treatment service, or any deviation without the consent of the patient from
23 the terms of an existing order relating to the administration of psychotropic drugs,
24 or a change of residence from one local governing entity to another. A material
25 change shall not mean a change in the dosage or the specific psychotropic drug
26 within the type ordered by the court.  Any application for court approval shall be
27 served upon all persons required to be served with notice of a petition for an order
28 authorizing involuntary outpatient treatment. Either party may move for a hearing
29 on the application. If a motion is not filed within five days from the date the
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1 application is filed, the court shall grant the application.
2	*          *          *
3 §72. Application for additional periods of treatment
4	A. The court order for outpatient treatment shall expire at the end of the
5 specified period unless a petition or motion for an extension has been filed. If any
6 person or entity authorized within R.S. 28:67 the director determines that a patient
7 requires further involuntary outpatient treatment, he shall file a petition or motion for
8 continued treatment prior to the expiration of the initial involuntary outpatient
9 treatment ordered by the court. If a patient has been ordered to receive outpatient
10 treatment for four consecutive six-month to one-year periods, the period of any
11 subsequent order may exceed one year but shall not exceed two years.
12	B. The procedure for obtaining an extension shall be the same as for
13 obtaining the original order. However, the time periods provided in R.S. 28:66(A)(4)
14 shall not be applicable in determining the appropriateness of the extension. The court
15 order requiring blood or laboratory testing shall be subject to review after six months
16 by the physician, psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or psychologist who
17 developed the written treatment plan or who is designated by the director, and the
18 blood or laboratory testing may be terminated without further action of the court.
19 §73. Application to stay, vacate, or modify
20	In addition to any right or remedy available by law, the patient may apply to
21 the court to stay, vacate, or modify the order and he shall notify the director of the
22 local governing entity or designee of his application.
23	*          *          *
24 §75. Failure to comply with involuntary outpatient treatment
25	A. If either party alleges noncompliance under the written treatment
26 plan, a judicial review can be scheduled and all persons listed in R.S. 28:69(A)
27 are to receive notice.
28	B. When a physician, psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner or
29 psychologist determines the patient has failed to comply with the ordered treatment,
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1 efforts were made to solicit compliance by the district, the region, case manager or
2 assertive community treatment provider, and the patient may be in need of
3 involuntary admission to a treatment facility, he may execute an emergency
4 certificate in accordance with R.S. 28:53, request an order for custody in accordance
5 with R.S. 28:53.2, or seek a judicial commitment in accordance with R.S. 28:54.
6	B.C. If the patient refuses to take medication or refuses to take or fails blood
7 or other laboratory tests as required by court order, the physician, psychiatric mental
8 health nurse practitioner or psychologist may consider his refusal in determining
9 whether the patient is in need of inpatient treatment services.
10 §76.  Definitions
11	As used in this Part, "Physician's Report to Court" means the reports
12 provided for in R.S. 28:56(A)(2)(b).
The original instrument and the following digest, which constitutes no part
of the legislative instrument, were prepared by Mary Dozier O'Brien.
DIGEST
SB 306 Original 2018 Regular Session	Barrow
Present law provides for a person to be found in need of involuntary outpatient treatment
necessitates a finding of being a danger to self or others.
Proposed law adds "gravely disabled" as a category for determining if a person is in need of
involuntary outpatient treatment.
Present law provides that only the director or administrator of a hospital in which a patient
is hospitalized may petition the court to authorize involuntary outpatient treatment for that
patient. Proposed law adds the treating physician as being authorized to file the petition. 
Present law provides that only the director of an emergency receiving center may file a
petition for involuntary outpatient treatment.  Proposed law expands that to include the
administrator of the facility and the treating physician.
Present law requires that in the case of a petition for involuntary outpatient treatment shall
be heard within five days of filing. Proposed law allows a hearing no later than 18 days after
filing.
Proposed law expands the court's authority to order service of pleadings and to allow
testimony of the patient by way of electronic means, if all parties agree.
Present law provides requirements for the written treatment plan to be utilized in the case
of involuntary outpatient treatment.
Proposed law specifies that the plan shall include a provider who has agreed to provide
services.
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Present law requires assertive community services to be included in such a plan. Proposed
law allows for discretion depending upon whether such services are readily available.
Proposed law requires that a director or designee of a facility certify that the services ordered
are available and can be readily accessed by the patient.
Proposed law sets out criteria relative to treatment plans and the modification thereof. 
Proposed law defines the reports issued pursuant to present law (R.S. 28:56(A)(2)(b)) by the
director or administrator of the treatment facility to which the person has been judicially
committed to the court and to counsel of record setting forth the patient's response to
treatment, his current condition, and the reasons why continued involuntary treatment is
necessary to improve the patient's condition or to prevent it from deteriorating as the
"Physician's Report to Court".
Effective August 1, 2018.
(Amends R.S. 28:66(A)(6) and (B), 67(1) and (2), 68, 69(A)(1) and (2), (C) and (D), 70(A),
(C), (D), and (E), 71(B), (C), (D), (E) and (F), 72, 73, and 75; adds R.S. 28:69(A)(3), 70(F),
and 76)
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