1 / 19

ADVANCE PLANNING FOR CRISIS

ADVANCE PLANNING FOR CRISIS. Today’s Topics. Background Legal Framework Practical Suggestions Q&A. DECISIONS, DECISIONS. Stating the Obvious. When crisis hits, you are better off with a plan! A good plan requires many features! Access to Information People Preferences Resources

Download Presentation

ADVANCE PLANNING FOR CRISIS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ADVANCE PLANNING FOR CRISIS

  2. Today’s Topics • Background • Legal Framework • Practical Suggestions • Q&A

  3. DECISIONS, DECISIONS

  4. Stating the Obvious • When crisis hits, you are better off with a plan! • A good plan requires many features! • Access to Information • People • Preferences • Resources • Authority

  5. Declaration for Mental Health Treatment • Who can use it: An adult of “sound mind” who is not being coerced. • Who decides person is of sound mind: two witnesses. • What does it cover: convulsive treatment, psychiatric medications, 17 days inpatient, outpatient

  6. Declaration for Mental Health Treatment • How long does it last: 3 years or until revoked by the capable adult. If invoked, when person regains capacity. • How is it invoked: when two physicians find a person “incapable.” • What is “incapable”: a person’s ability to receive and evaluate information effectively or communicate decisions is impaired to such an extent that the person currently lacks the capacity to make mental health treatment decisions

  7. Declaration for Mental Health Treatment • What can the Declaration do: • Give or withhold consent to certain treatment • Name a representative (attorney-in-fact) to make decisions during incapacitation • Give information about background, symptoms, allergies, desires, etc. • Allow another person to see medical records related to mental health treatment

  8. Declaration for Mental Health Treatment • What are the duties of the attorney-in-fact: • Must agree to act if and when person becomes incapable. • May receive otherwise confidential information related to treatment. • Is not personally liable for the cost of care. • In making decisions, must act consistently with the desires of the principal as expressed in the declaration. • If not expressed, or otherwise known by the attorney-in-fact, must act in what the in the best interests of the adult. Has “good faith” immunity.

  9. Guardianship: Capacity to Meet Needs • Impaired Ability • To receive and evaluate information effectively, or • To communicate decisions • Can’t meet the essential requirements for physical health or safety.

  10. Guardianship: Capacity to Meet Needs • Actions necessary to provide the: • health care, • food, • shelter, • clothing, • personal hygiene and • other care • Without which serious physical injury or illness is likely to occur.

  11. Guardianship: Limitations • Appointed only as necessary to promote and protect the well-being of the protected person. • Designed to encourage the development of maximum self-reliance and independence • Ordered only to the extent necessitated by the person’s actual mental and physical limitations.

  12. Guardianship: Powers • Placement • Care • Comfort • Maintenance • Training • Education • Health Decisions • Spending for Above

  13. Guardianship: Limitations • No sterilization • Keep rights not given guardian • Voting • Hire lawyer • Right to records • Need court approval for restrictive placements and charging room and board.

  14. Supported Decision-Making USES: • Relationships • Practices • Arrangements • Agreements

  15. Supported Decision-Making IN ORDER TO: • Maximize independence • Promote self-advocacy • Avoid intrusive interventions

  16. Substituted Judgment • Power of Attorney • Advance Directive • Protective Services • Guardian Ad Litem • Representative Payees • Medicaid Representative • Civil Commitment • Criminal Penalties • Emergency Medical • Guardian/Conservator

  17. From NAMI Minnesota • Identify people willing to help • List the phone numbers of the mental health providers and the mental health crisis team • Include a list of current medications and their dosages • List treatments that have been used in the past (CBT, DBT) • Identify key words or calming techniques that have worked in the past • Identify your loved one’s preferred treatment facilities • Include a copy of their advanced psychiatric directive (if available)

  18. Resources • Declaration form and instructions: http://www.oregon.gov/OHA/amh/Pages/services/planning.aspx • DRO booklets on Oregon mental health laws, guardianship, and more: http://www.droregon.org/need-help/dro-publications • Mental Health Crisis Planning booklet from NAMI Minnesota: http://www.namihelps.org/Crisis-Booklet-Adults.pdf

  19. Bob Joondeph, Executive Directorbob@droregon.org

More Related