Texas 2023 88th Regular

Texas House Bill HB3162 Senate Committee Report / Bill

Filed 05/17/2023

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                    By: Klick, et al. (Senate Sponsor - Springer) H.B. No. 3162
 (In the Senate - Received from the House May 9, 2023;
 May 11, 2023, read first time and referred to Committee on Health &
 Human Services; May 17, 2023, reported favorably by the following
 vote:  Yeas 9, Nays 0; May 17, 2023, sent to printer.)
Click here to see the committee vote


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to advance directives, do-not-resuscitate orders, and
 health care treatment decisions made by or on behalf of certain
 patients, including a review of directives and decisions.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subchapter B, Chapter 166, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended by adding Section 166.0445 to read as follows:
 Sec. 166.0445.  LIMITATION ON LIABILITY FOR PERFORMING
 CERTAIN MEDICAL PROCEDURES. (a) A physician or a health care
 professional acting under the direction of a physician is not
 subject to civil liability for participating in a medical procedure
 performed under Section 166.046(d-2).
 (b)  A physician or a health care professional acting under
 the direction of a physician is not subject to criminal liability
 for participating in a medical procedure performed under Section
 166.046(d-2) unless:
 (1)  the physician or health care professional in
 participating in the medical procedure acted with a specific
 malicious intent to cause the death of the patient and that conduct
 significantly hastened the patient's death; and
 (2)  the hastening of the patient's death is not
 attributable to the risks associated with the medical procedure.
 (c)  A physician or a health care professional acting under
 the direction of a physician has not engaged in unprofessional
 conduct by participating in a medical procedure performed under
 Section 166.046(d-2) unless the physician or health care
 professional in participating in the medical procedure acted with a
 specific malicious intent to harm the patient.
 SECTION 2.  The heading to Section 166.046, Health and
 Safety Code, is amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 166.046.  PROCEDURE IF NOT EFFECTUATING [A] DIRECTIVE
 OR TREATMENT DECISION FOR CERTAIN PATIENTS.
 SECTION 3.  Section 166.046, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsections (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), and (g) and
 adding Subsections (a-1), (a-2), (b-1), (b-2), (b-3), (d-1), (d-2),
 (d-3), and (i) to read as follows:
 (a)  This section applies only to health care and treatment
 for a patient who is determined to be incompetent or is otherwise
 mentally or physically incapable of communication.
 (a-1)  If an attending physician refuses to honor an [a
 patient's] advance directive of or [a] health care or treatment
 decision made by or on behalf of a patient to whom this section
 applies, the physician's refusal shall be reviewed by an ethics or
 medical committee. The attending physician may not be a member of
 that committee during the review. The patient shall be given
 life-sustaining treatment during the review.
 (a-2)  An ethics or medical committee that reviews a
 physician's refusal to honor an advance directive or health care or
 treatment decision under Subsection (a-1) shall consider the
 patient's well-being in conducting the review but may not make any
 judgment on the patient's quality of life. For purposes of this
 section, a decision by the committee based on any of the
 considerations described by Subdivisions (1) through (5) is not a
 judgment on the patient's quality of life. If the review requires
 the committee to determine whether life-sustaining treatment
 requested in the patient's advance directive or by the person
 responsible for the patient's health care decisions is medically
 inappropriate, the committee shall consider whether provision of
 the life-sustaining treatment:
 (1)  will prolong the natural process of dying or
 hasten the patient's death;
 (2)  will result in substantial, irremediable, and
 objectively measurable physical pain that is not outweighed by the
 benefit of providing the treatment;
 (3)  is medically contraindicated such that the
 provision of the treatment seriously exacerbates life-threatening
 medical problems not outweighed by the benefit of providing the
 treatment;
 (4)  is consistent with the prevailing standard of
 care; or
 (5)  is contrary to the patient's clearly documented
 desires.
 (b)  The [patient or the] person responsible for the
 patient's health care decisions [of the individual who has made the
 decision regarding the directive or treatment decision]:
 (1)  [may be given a written description of the ethics
 or medical committee review process and any other policies and
 procedures related to this section adopted by the health care
 facility;
 [(2)]  shall be informed in writing [of the committee
 review process] not less than seven calendar days [48 hours] before
 the meeting called to discuss the patient's directive, unless the
 [time] period is waived by written mutual agreement, of:
 (A)  the ethics or medical committee review
 process and any other related policies and procedures adopted by
 the health care facility, including any policy described by
 Subsection (b-1);
 (B)  the rights described in Subdivisions
 (3)(A)-(D);
 (C)  the date, time, and location of the meeting;
 (D)  the work contact information of the
 facility's personnel who, in the event of a disagreement, will be
 responsible for overseeing the reasonable effort to transfer the
 patient to another physician or facility willing to comply with the
 directive;
 (E)  the factors the committee is required to
 consider under Subsection (a-2); and
 (F)  the language in Section 166.0465;
 (2) [(3)]  at the time of being [so] informed under
 Subdivision (1), shall be provided:
 (A)  a copy of the appropriate statement set forth
 in Section 166.052; and
 (B)  a copy of the registry list of health care
 providers and referral groups that have volunteered their readiness
 to consider accepting transfer or to assist in locating a provider
 willing to accept transfer that is posted on the website maintained
 by the department under Section 166.053; and
 (3) [(4)]  is entitled to:
 (A)  attend and participate in the meeting as
 scheduled by the committee;
 (B)  receive during the meeting a written
 statement of the first name, first initial of the last name, and
 title of each committee member who will participate in the meeting;
 (C)  subject to Subsection (b-1):
 (i)  be accompanied at the meeting by the
 patient's spouse, parents, adult children, and not more than four
 additional individuals, including legal counsel, a physician, a
 health care professional, or a patient advocate, selected by the
 person responsible for the patient's health care decisions; and
 (ii)  have an opportunity during the open
 portion of the meeting to either directly or through another
 individual attending the meeting:
 (a)  explain the justification for the
 health care or treatment request made by or on behalf of the
 patient;
 (b)  respond to information relating
 to the patient that is submitted or presented during the open
 portion of the meeting; and
 (c)  state any concerns of the person
 responsible for the patient's health care decisions regarding
 compliance with this section or Section 166.0465, including stating
 an opinion that one or more of the patient's disabilities are not
 relevant to the committee's determination of whether the medical or
 surgical intervention is medically appropriate;
 (D)  receive a written notice [explanation] of:
 (i)  the decision reached during the review
 process accompanied by an explanation of the decision, including,
 if applicable, the committee's reasoning for affirming that
 requested life-sustaining treatment is medically inappropriate;
 (ii)  the patient's major medical conditions
 as identified by the committee, including any disability of the
 patient considered by the committee in reaching the decision,
 except the notice is not required to specify whether any medical
 condition qualifies as a disability;
 (iii)  a statement that the committee has
 complied with Subsection (a-2) and Section 166.0465; and
 (iv)  the health care facilities contacted
 before the meeting as part of the transfer efforts under Subsection
 (d) and, for each listed facility that denied the request to
 transfer the patient and provided a reason for the denial, the
 provided reason;
 (E) [(C)]  receive a copy of or electronic access
 to the portion of the patient's medical record related to the
 treatment received by the patient in the facility for [the lesser
 of:
 [(i)]  the period of the patient's current
 admission to the facility; [or
 [(ii)  the preceding 30 calendar days;] and
 (F) [(D)]  receive a copy of or electronic access
 to all of the patient's reasonably available diagnostic results and
 reports related to the medical record provided under Paragraph (E)
 [(C)].
 (b-1)  A health care facility may adopt and implement a
 written policy for meetings held under this section that is
 reasonable and necessary to:
 (1)  facilitate information sharing and discussion of
 the patient's medical status and treatment requirements, including
 provisions related to attendance, confidentiality, and timing
 regarding any agenda item; and
 (2)  preserve the effectiveness of the meeting,
 including provisions disclosing that the meeting is not a legal
 proceeding and the committee will enter into an executive session
 for deliberations.
 (b-2)  Notwithstanding Subsection (b)(3), the following
 individuals may not attend or participate in the executive session
 of an ethics or medical committee under this section:
 (1)  the physicians or health care professionals
 providing health care and treatment to the patient; or
 (2)  the person responsible for the patient's health
 care decisions or any person attending the meeting under Subsection
 (b)(3)(C)(i).
 (b-3)  If the health care facility or person responsible for
 the patient's health care decisions intends to have legal counsel
 attend the meeting of the ethics or medical committee, the facility
 or person, as applicable, shall make a good faith effort to provide
 written notice of that intention not less than 48 hours before the
 meeting begins.
 (c)  The written notice [explanation] required by Subsection
 (b)(3)(D)(i) [Subsection (b)(4)(B)] must be included in the
 patient's medical record.
 (d)  After written notice is provided under Subsection
 (b)(1), [If] the patient's attending physician [, the patient, or
 the person responsible for the health care decisions of the
 individual does not agree with the decision reached during the
 review process under Subsection (b), the physician] shall make a
 reasonable effort to transfer the patient to a physician who is
 willing to comply with the directive. The health care [If the
 patient is a patient in a health care facility, the] facility's
 personnel shall assist the physician in arranging the patient's
 transfer to:
 (1)  another physician;
 (2)  an alternative care setting within that facility;
 or
 (3)  another facility.
 (d-1)  If another health care facility denies the patient's
 transfer request, the personnel of the health care facility
 assisting with the patient's transfer efforts under Subsection (d)
 shall make a good faith effort to inquire whether the facility that
 denied the patient's transfer request would be more likely to
 approve the transfer request if a medical procedure, as that term is
 defined in this section, is performed on the patient.
 (d-2)  If the patient's advance directive or the person
 responsible for the patient's health care decisions is requesting
 life-sustaining treatment that the attending physician has decided
 and the ethics or medical committee has affirmed is medically
 inappropriate:
 (1)  the attending physician or another physician
 responsible for the care of the patient shall perform on the patient
 each medical procedure that satisfies all of the following
 conditions:
 (A)  in the attending physician's judgment, the
 medical procedure is reasonable and necessary to help effect the
 patient's transfer under Subsection (d);
 (B)  an authorized representative for another
 health care facility with the ability to comply with the patient's
 advance directive or the health care or treatment decision made by
 or on behalf of the patient has expressed to the personnel described
 by Subsection (b)(1)(D) or the attending physician that the
 facility is more likely to accept the patient's transfer to the
 other facility if the medical procedure is performed on the
 patient;
 (C)  in the medical judgment of the physician who
 would perform the medical procedure, performing the medical
 procedure is:
 (i)  within the prevailing standard of
 medical care; and
 (ii)  not medically contraindicated or
 medically inappropriate under the circumstances;
 (D)  in the medical judgment of the physician who
 would perform the medical procedure, the physician has the training
 and experience to perform the medical procedure;
 (E)  the physician who would perform the medical
 procedure has medical privileges at the facility where the patient
 is receiving care authorizing the physician to perform the medical
 procedure at the facility;
 (F)  the facility where the patient is receiving
 care has determined the facility has the resources for the
 performance of the medical procedure at the facility; and
 (G)  the person responsible for the patient's
 health care decisions provides consent on behalf of the patient for
 the medical procedure; and
 (2)  the person responsible for the patient's health
 care decisions is entitled to receive:
 (A)  a delay notice:
 (i)  if, at the time the written decision is
 provided as required by Subsection (b)(3)(D)(i), a medical
 procedure satisfies all of the conditions described by Subdivision
 (1); or
 (ii)  if:
 (a)  at the time the written decision
 is provided as required by Subsection (b)(3)(D)(i), a medical
 procedure satisfies all of the conditions described by Subdivision
 (1) except Subdivision (1)(G); and
 (b)  the person responsible for the
 patient's health care decisions provides to the attending physician
 or another physician or health care professional providing direct
 care to the patient consent on behalf of the patient for the medical
 procedure within 24 hours of the request for consent;
 (B)  a start notice:
 (i)  if, at the time the written decision is
 provided as required by Subsection (b)(3)(D)(i), no medical
 procedure satisfies all of the conditions described by Subdivisions
 (1)(A) through (F); or
 (ii)  if:
 (a)  at the time the written decision
 is provided as required by Subsection (b)(3)(D)(i), a medical
 procedure satisfies all of the conditions described by Subdivision
 (1) except Subdivision (1)(G); and
 (b)  the person responsible for the
 patient's health care decisions does not provide to the attending
 physician or another physician or health care professional
 providing direct care to the patient consent on behalf of the
 patient for the medical procedure within 24 hours of the request for
 consent; and
 (C)  a start notice accompanied by a statement
 that one or more of the conditions described by Subdivisions (1)(A)
 through (G) are no longer satisfied if, after a delay notice is
 provided in accordance with Subdivision (2)(A) and before the
 medical procedure on which the delay notice is based is performed on
 the patient, one or more of those conditions are no longer
 satisfied.
 (d-3)  After the 25-day period described by Subsection (e)
 begins, the period may not be suspended or stopped for any reason.
 This subsection does not limit or affect a court's ability to order
 an extension of the period in accordance with Subsection (g).
 Subsection (d-2) does not require a medical procedure to be
 performed on the patient after the expiration of the 25-day period.
 (e)  If the patient's advance directive [patient] or the
 person responsible for the patient's health care decisions [of the
 patient] is requesting life-sustaining treatment that the
 attending physician has decided and the ethics or medical committee
 has affirmed is medically inappropriate treatment, the patient
 shall be given available life-sustaining treatment pending
 transfer under Subsection (d).  This subsection does not authorize
 withholding or withdrawing pain management medication, medical
 interventions [procedures] necessary to provide comfort, or any
 other health care provided to alleviate a patient's pain.  The
 patient is responsible for any costs incurred in transferring the
 patient to another health care facility.  The attending physician,
 any other physician responsible for the care of the patient, and the
 health care facility are not obligated to provide life-sustaining
 treatment after the 25th calendar [10th] day after a start notice is
 [both the written decision and the patient's medical record
 required under Subsection (b) are] provided in accordance with
 Subsection (d-2)(2)(B) or (C) to [the patient or] the person
 responsible for the patient's health care decisions or a medical
 procedure for which a delay notice was provided in accordance with
 Subsection (d-2)(2)(A) is performed, whichever occurs first, [of
 the patient] unless ordered to extend the 25-day period [do so]
 under Subsection (g), except that artificially administered
 nutrition and hydration must be provided unless, based on
 reasonable medical judgment, providing artificially administered
 nutrition and hydration would:
 (1)  hasten the patient's death;
 (2)  be medically contraindicated such that the
 provision of the treatment seriously exacerbates life-threatening
 medical problems not outweighed by the benefit of providing [the
 provision of] the treatment;
 (3)  result in substantial, irremediable, and
 objectively measurable physical pain not outweighed by the benefit
 of providing [the provision of] the treatment;
 (4)  be medically ineffective in prolonging life; or
 (5)  be contrary to the patient's or surrogate's
 clearly documented desire not to receive artificially administered
 nutrition or hydration.
 (g)  At the request of [the patient or] the person
 responsible for the patient's health care decisions [of the
 patient], the appropriate district or county court shall extend the
 [time] period provided under Subsection (e) only if the court
 finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that there is a
 reasonable expectation that a physician or health care facility
 that will honor the patient's directive will be found if the time
 extension is granted.
 (i)  In this section:
 (1)  "Delay notice" means a written notice that the
 first day of the 25-day period provided under Subsection (e), after
 which life-sustaining treatment may be withheld or withdrawn unless
 a court has granted an extension under Subsection (g), will be
 delayed until the calendar day after a medical procedure required
 by Subsection (d-2)(1) is performed unless, before the medical
 procedure is performed, the person receives written notice of an
 earlier first day because one or more conditions described by that
 subdivision are no longer satisfied.
 (2)  "Medical procedure" means only a tracheostomy or a
 percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy.
 (3)  "Start notice" means a written notice that the
 25-day period provided under Subsection (e), after which
 life-sustaining treatment may be withheld or withdrawn unless a
 court has granted an extension under Subsection (g), will begin on
 the first calendar day after the date the notice is provided.
 SECTION 4.  Subchapter B, Chapter 166, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended by adding Section 166.0465 to read as follows:
 Sec. 166.0465.  ETHICS OR MEDICAL COMMITTEE DECISION RELATED
 TO PATIENT DISABILITY. (a) In this section, "disability" has the
 meaning assigned by the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 in
 42 U.S.C. Section 12102.
 (b)  During the review process under Section 166.046(b), the
 ethics or medical committee may not consider a patient's disability
 that existed before the patient's current admission unless the
 disability is relevant in determining whether the medical or
 surgical intervention is medically appropriate.
 SECTION 5.  Sections 166.052(a) and (b), Health and Safety
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  In cases in which the attending physician refuses to
 honor an advance directive or health care or treatment decision
 requesting the provision of life-sustaining treatment for a patient
 who is determined to be incompetent or is otherwise mentally or
 physically incapable of communication, the statement required by
 Section 166.046(b)(2)(A) [166.046(b)(3)(A)] shall be in
 substantially the following form:
 When There Is A Disagreement About Medical Treatment:  The
 Physician Recommends Against Certain Life-Sustaining Treatment
 That You Wish To Continue
 You have been given this information because the patient has
 requested through an advance directive or you have requested on
 behalf of the patient that life-sustaining treatment* be provided
 to [for yourself as the patient or on behalf of] the patient, [as
 applicable,] which the attending physician believes is not
 medically appropriate.  This information is being provided to help
 you understand state law, your rights, and the resources available
 to you in such circumstances.  It outlines the process for resolving
 disagreements about treatment among patients, families, and
 physicians.  It is based upon Section 166.046 of the Texas Advance
 Directives Act, codified in Chapter 166, Texas Health and Safety
 Code.
 When an attending physician refuses to comply with an advance
 directive or other request for life-sustaining treatment for a
 patient who is determined to be incompetent or is otherwise
 mentally or physically incapable of communication because of the
 physician's judgment that the treatment would be medically
 inappropriate, the case will be reviewed by an ethics or medical
 committee.  Life-sustaining treatment will be provided through the
 review.
 You will receive notification of this review at least seven
 calendar days [48 hours] before a meeting of the committee related
 to your case.  You are entitled to attend the meeting.  With your
 agreement, the meeting may be held sooner than seven calendar days
 [48 hours], if possible.
 You are entitled to receive a written explanation of the
 decision reached during the review process.
 If after this review process both the attending physician and
 the ethics or medical committee conclude that life-sustaining
 treatment is medically inappropriate and yet you continue to
 request such treatment, then the following procedure will occur:
 1.  The physician, with the help of the health care facility,
 will assist you in trying to find a physician and facility willing
 to provide the requested treatment.
 2.  You are being given a list of health care providers,
 licensed physicians, health care facilities, and referral groups
 that have volunteered their readiness to consider accepting
 transfer, or to assist in locating a provider willing to accept
 transfer, maintained by the Department of State Health Services.
 You may wish to contact providers, facilities, or referral groups
 on the list or others of your choice to get help in arranging a
 transfer.
 3.  The patient will continue to be given life-sustaining
 treatment until the patient can be transferred to a willing
 provider for up to 25 calendar [10] days from the time you were
 given a written notice of the first day of the 25-day period or a
 medical procedure is performed that delayed the 25-day period and
 for which you received notice, whichever occurs first [both the
 committee's written decision that life-sustaining treatment is not
 appropriate and the patient's medical record].  The patient will
 continue to be given after the 25-day [10-day] period treatment to
 enhance pain management and reduce suffering, including
 artificially administered nutrition and hydration, unless, based
 on reasonable medical judgment, providing artificially
 administered nutrition and hydration would hasten the patient's
 death, be medically contraindicated such that the provision of the
 treatment seriously exacerbates life-threatening medical problems
 not outweighed by the benefit of the provision of the treatment,
 result in substantial irremediable physical pain not outweighed by
 the benefit of the provision of the treatment, be medically
 ineffective in prolonging life, or be contrary to the patient's or
 surrogate's clearly documented desires.
 4.  If a transfer can be arranged, the patient will be
 responsible for the costs of the transfer.
 5.  If a provider cannot be found willing to give the
 requested treatment within 25 calendar [10] days, life-sustaining
 treatment may be withdrawn unless a court of law has granted an
 extension.
 6.  You may ask the appropriate district or county court to
 extend the 25-day [the 10-day] period if the court finds that there
 is a reasonable expectation that you may find a physician or health
 care facility willing to provide life-sustaining treatment if the
 extension is granted.  Patient medical records will be provided to
 the patient or surrogate in accordance with Section 241.154, Texas
 Health and Safety Code.
 *"Life-sustaining treatment" means treatment that, based on
 reasonable medical judgment, sustains the life of a patient and
 without which the patient will die.  The term includes both
 life-sustaining medications and artificial life support, such as
 mechanical breathing machines, kidney dialysis treatment, and
 artificially administered nutrition and hydration.  The term does
 not include the administration of pain management medication or the
 performance of a medical procedure considered to be necessary to
 provide comfort care, or any other medical care provided to
 alleviate a patient's pain.
 (b)  In cases in which the attending physician refuses to
 comply with an advance directive or a health care or treatment
 decision requesting the withholding or withdrawal of
 life-sustaining treatment for a patient who is determined to be
 incompetent or is otherwise mentally or physically incapable of
 communication, the statement required by Section 166.046(b)(2)(A)
 [166.046(b)(3)(A)] shall be in substantially the following form:
 When There Is A Disagreement About Medical Treatment:  The
 Physician Recommends Life-Sustaining Treatment That You Wish To
 Stop
 You have been given this information because the patient has
 requested through an advance directive or you have requested on
 behalf of the patient that [the withdrawal or withholding of]
 life-sustaining treatment* be withdrawn or withheld from [for
 yourself as the patient or on behalf of] the patient, [as
 applicable,] and the attending physician disagrees with and refuses
 to comply with that request.  The information is being provided to
 help you understand state law, your rights, and the resources
 available to you in such circumstances.  It outlines the process for
 resolving disagreements about treatment among patients, families,
 and physicians.  It is based upon Section 166.046 of the Texas
 Advance Directives Act, codified in Chapter 166, Texas Health and
 Safety Code.
 When an attending physician refuses to comply with an advance
 directive or other request for withdrawal or withholding of
 life-sustaining treatment for any reason, the case will be reviewed
 by an ethics or medical committee. Life-sustaining treatment will
 be provided through the review.
 You will receive notification of this review at least seven
 calendar days [48 hours] before a meeting of the committee related
 to your case. You are entitled to attend the meeting. With your
 agreement, the meeting may be held sooner than seven calendar days
 [48 hours], if possible.
 You are entitled to receive a written explanation of the
 decision reached during the review process.
 If you or the attending physician do not agree with the
 decision reached during the review process, and the attending
 physician still refuses to comply with your request to withhold or
 withdraw life-sustaining treatment, then the following procedure
 will occur:
 1.  The physician, with the help of the health care facility,
 will assist you in trying to find a physician and facility willing
 to withdraw or withhold the life-sustaining treatment.
 2.  You are being given a list of health care providers,
 licensed physicians, health care facilities, and referral groups
 that have volunteered their readiness to consider accepting
 transfer, or to assist in locating a provider willing to accept
 transfer, maintained by the Department of State Health Services.
 You may wish to contact providers, facilities, or referral groups
 on the list or others of your choice to get help in arranging a
 transfer.
 *"Life-sustaining treatment" means treatment that, based on
 reasonable medical judgment, sustains the life of a patient and
 without which the patient will die. The term includes both
 life-sustaining medications and artificial life support, such as
 mechanical breathing machines, kidney dialysis treatment, and
 artificially administered nutrition and hydration. The term does
 not include the administration of pain management medication or the
 performance of a medical procedure considered to be necessary to
 provide comfort care, or any other medical care provided to
 alleviate a patient's pain.
 SECTION 6.  Subchapter B, Chapter 166, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended by adding Section 166.054 to read as follows:
 Sec. 166.054.  REPORTING REQUIREMENTS REGARDING ETHICS OR
 MEDICAL COMMITTEE PROCESSES. (a) Not later than the 180th day
 after the date written notice is provided under Section
 166.046(b)(1), a health care facility shall prepare and submit to
 the commission a report that contains the following information:
 (1)  the number of days that elapsed from the patient's
 admission to the facility to the date notice was provided under
 Section 166.046(b)(1);
 (2)  whether the ethics or medical committee met to
 review the case under Section 166.046 and, if the committee did
 meet, the number of days that elapsed from the date notice was
 provided under Section 166.046(b)(1) to the date the meeting was
 held;
 (3)  whether the patient was:
 (A)  transferred to a physician within the same
 facility who was willing to comply with the patient's advance
 directive or a health care or treatment decision made by or on
 behalf of the patient;
 (B)  transferred to a different health care
 facility; or
 (C)  discharged from the facility to a private
 residence or other setting that is not a health care facility;
 (4)  whether the patient died while receiving
 life-sustaining treatment at the facility;
 (5)  whether life-sustaining treatment was withheld or
 withdrawn from the patient at the facility after expiration of the
 time period described by Section 166.046(e) and, if so, the
 disposition of the patient after the withholding or withdrawal of
 life-sustaining treatment at the facility, as selected from the
 following categories:
 (A)  the patient died at the facility;
 (B)  the patient is currently a patient at the
 facility;
 (C)  the patient was transferred to a different
 health care facility; or
 (D)  the patient was discharged from the facility
 to a private residence or other setting that is not a health care
 facility;
 (6)  the age group of the patient selected from the
 following categories:
 (A)  17 years of age or younger;
 (B)  18 years of age or older and younger than 66
 years of age; or
 (C)  66 years of age or older;
 (7)  the health insurance coverage status of the
 patient selected from the following categories:
 (A)  private health insurance coverage;
 (B)  public health plan coverage; or
 (C)  uninsured;
 (8)  the patient's sex;
 (9)  the patient's race;
 (10)  whether the facility was notified of and able to
 reasonably verify any public disclosure of the contact information
 for the facility's personnel, physicians or health care
 professionals who provide care at the facility, or members of the
 ethics or medical committee in connection with the patient's stay
 at the facility; and
 (11)  whether the facility was notified of and able to
 reasonably verify any public disclosure by facility personnel of
 the contact information for the patient's immediate family members
 or the person responsible for the patient's health care decisions
 in connection with the patient's stay at the facility.
 (b)  The commission shall ensure information provided in
 each report submitted by a health care facility under Subsection
 (a) is kept confidential and not disclosed in any manner, except as
 provided by this section.
 (c)  Not later than April 1 of each year, the commission
 shall prepare and publish on the commission's Internet website a
 report that contains:
 (1)  aggregate information compiled from the reports
 submitted to the commission under Subsection (a) during the
 preceding year on:
 (A)  the total number of written notices provided
 under Section 166.046(b)(1);
 (B)  the average number of days described by
 Subsection (a)(1);
 (C)  the total number of meetings held by ethics
 or medical committees to review cases under Section 166.046;
 (D)  the average number of days described by
 Subsection (a)(2);
 (E)  the total number of patients described by
 Subsections (a)(3)(A), (B), and (C);
 (F)  the total number of patients described by
 Subsection (a)(4);
 (G)  the total number of patients for whom
 life-sustaining treatment was withheld or withdrawn after
 expiration of the time period described by Section 166.046(e);
 (H)  the total number of cases for which the
 facility was notified of and able to reasonably verify the public
 disclosure of the contact information for the facility's personnel,
 physicians or health care professionals who provide care at the
 facility, or members of the ethics or medical committee in
 connection with the patient's stay at the facility; and
 (I)  the total number of cases for which the
 facility was notified of and able to reasonably verify the public
 disclosure by facility personnel of contact information for the
 patient's immediate family members or person responsible for the
 patient's health care decisions in connection with the patient's
 stay at the facility; and
 (2)  if the total number of reports submitted under
 Subsection (a) for the preceding year is 10 or more, aggregate
 information compiled from those reports on the total number of
 patients categorized by:
 (A)  sex;
 (B)  race;
 (C)  age group, based on the categories described
 by Subsection (a)(6);
 (D)  health insurance coverage status, based on
 the categories described by Subsection (a)(7); and
 (E)  for patients for whom life-sustaining
 treatment was withheld or withdrawn at the facility after
 expiration of the period described by Section 166.046(e), the total
 number of patients described by each of the following:
 (i)  Subsection (a)(5)(A);
 (ii)  Subsection (a)(5)(B);
 (iii)  Subsection (a)(5)(C); and
 (iv)  Subsection (a)(5)(D).
 (d)  If the commission receives fewer than 10 reports under
 Subsection (a) for inclusion in an annual report required under
 Subsection (c), the commission shall include in the next annual
 report prepared after the commission receives 10 or more reports
 the aggregate information for all years for which the information
 was not included in a preceding annual report. The commission shall
 include in the next annual report a statement that identifies each
 year during which an underlying report was submitted to the
 commission under Subsection (a).
 (e)  The annual report required by Subsection (c) or (d) may
 not include any information that could be used alone or in
 combination with other reasonably available information to
 identify any individual, entity, or facility.
 (f)  The executive commissioner shall adopt rules to:
 (1)  establish a standard form for the reporting
 requirements of this section; and
 (2)  protect and aggregate any information the
 commission receives under this section.
 (g)  Information collected as required by this section or
 submitted to the commission under this section:
 (1)  is not admissible in a civil or criminal
 proceeding in which a physician, health care professional acting
 under the direction of a physician, or health care facility is a
 defendant;
 (2)  may not be used in relation to any disciplinary
 action by a licensing or regulatory agency with oversight over a
 physician, health care professional acting under the direction of a
 physician, or health care facility; and
 (3)  is not public information or subject to disclosure
 under Chapter 552, Government Code, except as permitted by Section
 552.008, Government Code.
 SECTION 7.  Sections 166.203(a), (b), and (c), Health and
 Safety Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  A DNR order issued for a patient is valid only if [the
 patient's attending physician issues the order,] the order is
 dated[,] and [the order]:
 (1)  is issued by a physician providing direct care to
 the patient in compliance with:
 (A)  the written and dated directions of a patient
 who was competent at the time the patient wrote the directions;
 (B)  the oral directions of a competent patient
 delivered to or observed by two competent adult witnesses, at least
 one of whom must be a person not listed under Section 166.003(2)(E)
 or (F);
 (C)  the directions in an advance directive
 enforceable under Section 166.005 or executed in accordance with
 Section 166.032, 166.034, [or] 166.035, 166.082, 166.084, or
 166.085;
 (D)  the directions of a patient's:
 (i)  legal guardian;
 (ii) [or] agent under a medical power of
 attorney acting in accordance with Subchapter D; or
 (iii)  proxy as designated and authorized by
 a directive executed in accordance with Subchapter B to make a
 treatment decision for the patient if the patient becomes
 incompetent or otherwise mentally or physically incapable of
 communication; or
 (E)  a treatment decision made in accordance with
 Section 166.039; [or]
 (2)  is issued by the patient's attending physician
 and:
 (A)  the order is not contrary to the directions
 of a patient who was competent at the time the patient conveyed the
 directions; and
 (B)  [,] in the reasonable medical judgment of the
 patient's attending physician:
 (i) [(A)]  the patient's death is imminent,
 within minutes to hours, regardless of the provision of
 cardiopulmonary resuscitation; and
 (ii) [(B)]  the DNR order is medically
 appropriate; or
 (3)  is issued by the patient's attending physician:
 (A)  for a patient who is incompetent or otherwise
 mentally or physically incapable of communication; and
 (B)  in compliance with a decision:
 (i)  agreed on by the attending physician
 and the person responsible for the patient's health care decisions;
 and
 (ii)  concurred in by another physician who
 is not involved in the direct treatment of the patient or who is a
 representative of an ethics or medical committee of the health care
 facility in which the person is a patient.
 (b)  The DNR order takes effect at the time the order is
 issued, provided the order is placed in the patient's medical
 record as soon as practicable and may be issued and entered in a
 format acceptable under the policies of the health care facility or
 hospital.
 (c)  Unless notice is provided in accordance with Section
 166.204(a), before [Before] placing in a patient's medical record a
 DNR order issued under Subsection (a)(2), a [the] physician,
 physician assistant, nurse, or other person acting on behalf of a
 health care facility or hospital shall:
 (1)  inform the patient of the order's issuance; or
 (2)  if the patient is incompetent, make a reasonably
 diligent effort to contact or cause to be contacted and inform of
 the order's issuance:
 (A)  the patient's known agent under a medical
 power of attorney or legal guardian; or
 (B)  for a patient who does not have a known agent
 under a medical power of attorney or legal guardian, a person
 described by Section 166.039(b)(1), (2), or (3).
 SECTION 8.  Section 166.204, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsections (a), (b), and (c) and adding
 Subsection (a-1) to read as follows:
 (a)  If an individual arrives at a health care facility or
 hospital that is treating a patient for whom a DNR order is issued
 under Section 166.203(a)(2) and the individual notifies a
 physician, physician assistant, or nurse providing direct care to
 the patient of the individual's arrival, the physician, physician
 assistant, or nurse who has actual knowledge of the order shall,
 unless notice has been provided in accordance with Section
 166.203(c), disclose the order to the individual, provided the
 individual is:
 (1)  the patient's known agent under a medical power of
 attorney or legal guardian; or
 (2)  for a patient who does not have a known agent under
 a medical power of attorney or legal guardian, a person described by
 Section 166.039(b)(1), (2), or (3).
 (a-1)  For a patient who was incompetent at the time notice
 otherwise would have been provided to the patient under Section
 166.203(c)(1) and if a physician providing direct care to the
 patient later determines that, based on the physician's reasonable
 medical judgment, the patient has become competent, a physician,
 physician assistant, or nurse providing direct care to the patient
 shall disclose the order to the patient, provided that the
 physician, physician assistant, or nurse has actual knowledge:
 (1)  of the order; and
 (2)  that a physician providing direct care to the
 patient has determined that the patient has become competent.
 (b)  Failure to comply with Subsection (a) or (a-1) or
 Section 166.203(c) does not affect the validity of a DNR order
 issued under this subchapter.
 (c)  Any person, including a health care facility or
 hospital, [who makes a good faith effort to comply with Subsection
 (a) of this section or Section 166.203(c) and contemporaneously
 records the person's effort to comply with Subsection (a) of this
 section or Section 166.203(c) in the patient's medical record] is
 not civilly or criminally liable or subject to disciplinary action
 from the appropriate licensing authority for any act or omission
 related to providing notice under Subsection (a) or (a-1) of this
 section or Section 166.203(c) if the person:
 (1)  makes a good faith effort to comply with
 Subsection (a) or (a-1) or Section 166.203(c) and contemporaneously
 records in the patient's medical record the person's effort to
 comply with those provisions; or
 (2)  makes a good faith determination that the
 circumstances that would require the person to perform an act under
 Subsection (a) or (a-1) or Section 166.203(c) are not met.
 SECTION 9.  Section 166.205, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsections (a), (b), and (c) and adding
 Subsection (c-1) to read as follows:
 (a)  A physician providing direct care to a patient for whom
 a DNR order is issued shall revoke the patient's DNR order if [the
 patient or, as applicable, the patient's agent under a medical
 power of attorney or the patient's legal guardian if the patient is
 incompetent]:
 (1)  an advance directive that serves as the basis of
 the DNR order is properly revoked in accordance with this
 chapter; [effectively revokes an advance directive, in accordance
 with Section 166.042, for which a DNR order is issued under Section
 166.203(a); or]
 (2)  the patient expresses to any person providing
 direct care to the patient a revocation of consent to or intent to
 revoke a DNR order issued under Section 166.203(a); or
 (3)  the DNR order was issued under Section
 166.203(a)(1)(D) or (E) or Section 166.203(a)(3), and the person
 responsible for the patient's health care decisions expresses to
 any person providing direct care to the patient a revocation of
 consent to or intent to revoke the DNR order.
 (b)  A person providing direct care to a patient under the
 supervision of a physician shall notify the physician of the
 request to revoke a DNR order or of the revocation of an advance
 directive under Subsection (a).
 (c)  A patient's attending physician may at any time revoke a
 DNR order issued under:
 (1)  Section 166.203(a)(1)(A), (B), or (C), provided
 that:
 (A)  the order is for a patient who is incompetent
 or otherwise mentally or physically incapable of communication; and
 (B)  the decision to revoke the order is:
 (i)  agreed on by the attending physician
 and the person responsible for the patient's health care decisions;
 and
 (ii)  concurred in by another physician who
 is not involved in the direct treatment of the patient or who is a
 representative of an ethics or medical committee of the health care
 facility in which the person is a patient;
 (2)  Section 166.203(a)(1)(E), provided that the
 order's issuance was based on a treatment decision made in
 accordance with Section 166.039(e);
 (3)  Section 166.203(a)(2); or
 (4)  Section 166.203(a)(3).
 (c-1)  A patient's attending physician shall revoke a DNR
 order issued for the patient under Section 166.203(a)(2) if, in the
 attending physician's reasonable medical judgment, the condition
 described by Section 166.203(a)(2)(B)(i) is no longer satisfied.
 SECTION 10.  Sections 166.206(a) and (b), Health and Safety
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  If a [an attending] physician, health care facility, or
 hospital does not wish to execute or comply with a DNR order or the
 patient's instructions concerning the provision of cardiopulmonary
 resuscitation, the physician, facility, or hospital shall inform
 the patient, the legal guardian or qualified relatives of the
 patient, or the agent of the patient under a medical power of
 attorney of the benefits and burdens of cardiopulmonary
 resuscitation.
 (b)  If, after receiving notice under Subsection (a), the
 patient or another person authorized to act on behalf of the patient
 and the [attending] physician, health care facility, or hospital
 remain in disagreement, the physician, facility, or hospital shall
 make a reasonable effort to transfer the patient to another
 physician, facility, or hospital willing to execute or comply with
 a DNR order or the patient's instructions concerning the provision
 of cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
 SECTION 11.  Section 166.209, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 166.209.  ENFORCEMENT. (a) Subject to Sections
 166.205(d), 166.207, and 166.208 and Subsection (c), a [A]
 physician, physician assistant, nurse, or other person commits an
 offense if, with the specific intent to violate this subchapter,
 the person intentionally:
 (1)  conceals, cancels, effectuates, or falsifies
 another person's DNR order in violation of this subchapter; or
 (2)  [if the person intentionally] conceals or
 withholds personal knowledge of another person's revocation of a
 DNR order in violation of this subchapter.
 (a-1)  An offense under Subsection (a) [this subsection] is a
 Class A misdemeanor.  This section [subsection] does not preclude
 prosecution for any other applicable offense.
 (b)  Subject to Sections 166.205(d), 166.207, and 166.208, a
 [A] physician, health care professional, health care facility,
 hospital, or entity is subject to review and disciplinary action by
 the appropriate licensing authority for intentionally:
 (1)  failing to effectuate a DNR order in violation of
 this subchapter; or
 (2)  issuing a DNR order in violation of this
 subchapter.
 (c)  Subsection (a) does not apply to a person whose act or
 omission was based on a reasonable belief that the act or omission
 was in compliance with the wishes of the patient or the person
 responsible for the patient's health care decisions.
 SECTION 12.  Section 313.004, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by amending Subsections (a) and (c) and adding Subsection
 (a-1) to read as follows:
 (a)  If an adult patient of a home and community support
 services agency or in a hospital or nursing home, or an adult inmate
 of a county or municipal jail, is comatose, incapacitated, or
 otherwise mentally or physically incapable of communication and
 does not have a legal guardian or an agent under a medical power of
 attorney who is reasonably available after a reasonably diligent
 inquiry, an adult surrogate from the following list, in order of
 priority, who has decision-making capacity, is reasonably
 available after a reasonably diligent inquiry, and is willing to
 consent to medical treatment on behalf of the patient may consent to
 medical treatment on behalf of the patient:
 (1)  the patient's spouse;
 (2)  the patient's [an adult child of the patient who
 has the waiver and consent of all other qualified] adult children
 [of the patient to act as the sole decision-maker];
 (3)  [a majority of] the patient's parents [reasonably
 available adult children]; or
 (4)  the patient's nearest living relative [parents; or
 [(5)  the individual clearly identified to act for the
 patient by the patient before the patient became incapacitated, the
 patient's nearest living relative, or a member of the clergy].
 (a-1)  If the patient does not have a legal guardian, an
 agent under a medical power of attorney, or a person listed in
 Subsection (a) who is reasonably available after a reasonably
 diligent inquiry, another physician who is not involved in the
 medical treatment of the patient may concur with the treatment.
 (c)  Any medical treatment consented to under Subsection (a)
 or concurred with under Subsection (a-1) must be based on knowledge
 of what the patient would desire, if known.
 SECTION 13.  Chapter 166, Health and Safety Code, as amended
 by this Act, applies only to a review, consultation, disagreement,
 or other action relating to a health care or treatment decision made
 on or after the effective date of this Act. A review, consultation,
 disagreement, or other action relating to a health care or
 treatment decision made before the effective date of this Act is
 governed by the law in effect immediately before the effective date
 of this Act, and the former law is continued in effect for that
 purpose.
 SECTION 14.  Section 166.209, Health and Safety Code, as
 amended by this Act, applies only to conduct that occurs on or after
 the effective date of this Act. Conduct that occurs before the
 effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on the
 date the conduct occurred, and the former law is continued in effect
 for that purpose.
 SECTION 15.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2023.
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