Title: Advance Mental Health Care Directives
1Advance Mental Health Care Directives
- Resources for from this presentation can be
downloaded from www.mhsret.org/amhcd - Help in understanding the website address
- mhsret Mental Health Services Research,
Evaluation, and Training Program at UH - amhcd Advance Mental Health Care Directive
2Advance Mental Health Care Directives
- Presentation by
- A. Michael Wylie, Ph.D.
- Social Sciences Research Institute
- College of Social Sciences
- University of Hawaii at Manoa
- February 13, 2008
3Purpose of an Advance Directive
- To establish a persons preferences for treatment
should the person, in the future, become
incompetent or unable to communicate those
preferences to treatment providers.
4Mental Health Care Advance Directive
- Specifies treatment preferences for times when a
consumer of mental health services is unable to
communicate preferences as a consequence of
episodic deterioration in mental health.
5End-of-Life Health Care Directive is Different
from a Mental Health Directive in important
ways
- End-of-life directives assume chronic
deterioration in mental ability leading to death
vs. cyclical patterns of competency seen in
mental illness - Establishment of of proxy decision maker is
easier under Uniform Health Care Act (Chapter
327E) - revocation can occur at any time by patient
(error on side of caution)
6Advance Psychiatric DirectivesPsychiatric
Advance Directives (PAD)Advance Directive for
Mental HealthAdvance Mental Health Care
DirectiveAdvance Directive
7History of Advance Directives
- several high profile cases
- karen ann quinlan
- nancy cruzan
- lead to cruzan decision 1990
- congress enacted the patient selfdetermination
act of 1990
8Examples of Types of Preferences
- Effective or non-effective medications
- Specific treatments
- How to handle emergencies
- Hospital of choice
- Notification of specific people
9Proxy Directives
- Designation of agent to make decisions
- Breadth of decision-making
- legal authority
- a. substituted judgement
- b. best interest
10Elements Necessary to Use and Execute AMHCDs
- Education of consumers
- Access to legal aid if needed
- Training materials
- Competency during completion
- Communication and dissemination
- Provider involvement and awareness, respectful,
good faith efforts in compliance
11Issues in Designating an Agent
- Finding someone (cannot be a treatment team
member) - An agent must be willing and able to accept role
- Can designate back-up agents if primary agent is
unavailable or unwilling to serve
12Conditions Under Which Compliance Will Be
Enhanced
- Clear directive, specific, yet not overly
restrictive - Compatible with accepted medical practice
- Awareness and dissemination
- Appointment of a proxy decision maker who is very
familiar with preferences
13CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH COMPLIANCE MAY NOT OCCUR
- Unreasonable treatment preferences
- Illegal or unapproved drugs
- Financial conditions and resources
- Compliance will not occur
- court order takes precedence
- if life threatening emergency to self or others,
not likely to be followed - if provider is unaware of existence
14HISTORY OF ADVANCE MENTAL HEALTH CARE DIRECTIVES
- Minnesota was the first State in the Nation to
adopt an Advance Mental Health Care Directive in
1991 - Hawaii was the second State in the Nation to
adopt an Advance Mental Health Care Directive in
1992
15CHAPTER 327F, HRS MEDICAL TREATMENT DECISIONS
FOR PSYCHOTIC DISORDERS ACT
- ACT 84, 1992 Session Laws of Hawaii
- Did not permit designation of a proxy decision
maker - Heavily focused on the administration of
psychotropic medications - No sample form included
- Repealed by new law in 2004
16ADVANCE DIRECTIVE SURVEY OF CONSUMERS IN HAWAII
- During 1997-2000, SAMHSA funded an evaluation
study in Hawaii allowing a UH research team to
ask consumers statewide about their use and
familiarity with Hawaiis Advance Directive Law
(Chapter 327F, HRS) - Questions were included in a face-to-face
interview with a sample of 563 Medicaid
recipients receiving either managed care (207
consumers) or fee-for-service (356 consumers)
mental health treatment
17SURVEY QUESTION 1. (YES/NO)
- Have you heard about Hawaiis advance directive
for mental health treatment (that is, giving
permission for psychiatric treatment when it is
needed, even if it is against your will)? - 7 answered Yes
- (39 of the 563 participants)
18SURVEY QUESTION 2. (YES/NO)
- If Yes, have you completed Hawaiis advance
directive for mental health treatment? - 6 of 39 who had heard of the law answered yes
(15) - This represents only 1 of the entire sample (6
out of 563)(15)
19SURVEY QUESTION 3. (YES/NO)
- If Yes, did you appoint a surrogate decision
maker? - 3 of 6 who had completed an AMHCD had appointed a
proxy decision maker (50)
20SURVEY QUESTION 4. (5 POINT RATING SCALE )
- 4. If COMPLETED, were you satisfied with the
document? - 1 2 3 4
5 - No Slightly Mod. Quite Extremely
- a bit
- The mean rating on Q4 for those completing an
AMHCD was 3.4
21SURVEY SUMMARY
- The vast majority of consumers of mental health
services in 1998 did not know about Hawaiis
Advanced Directives law. In this study, only 7
stated they had heard about the law and only 1
of those interviewed had completed an AMHCD.
22Two Concurrent Activities Also Occurred during
this same general period
- Chapter 327E, HRS (Uniform Health Care Decision
Act, Modified) was established amongst great
controversy - The Hawaii Disability Rights Center began
facilitating Advance Mental Health Care
Directives following the Bazelton Model
23End-of-Life Health Care Directive is Different
from a Mental Health Directive in important ways
- End of Life Directives Assume Chronic
Deterioration Mental Ability Leading to Death vs.
Cyclical Patterns of Competency Seen in Mental
Illness - Establishment of of proxy decision maker is
easier under Uniform Health Care Act (Chapter
327E) - revocation can occur at any time by patient
(error on side of caution)
24Hawaii Disability Rights Center sponsored by
SAMHSA
- http//mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/
25The HDRC modified the Bazelon Center form for
Advance Directives for Mental Health Care and
began a Statewide initiative in 1999
26 27 AMHCDs COMPLETED BY HDRC FROM OCT. 1999 - MARCH
2005
- 10/99 - 9/00 Mntl Hlth - 44 Hlth - 1
- 10/00 - 9/01 Mntl Hlth - 17 Hlth - 11
- 10/01 - 9/02 Mntl Hlth - 14 Hlth - 15
- 10/02 - 9/03 Mntl Hlth - 18 Hlth - 17
- 10/03 - 9/04 Mntl Hlth - 12 Hlth - 17
- 10/04 - 3/05 Mntl Hlth - 15 Hlth - 9
- TOTAL 120 70
- COMBINED TOTAL 190
28PARALLEL TO THIS INITIATIVE THE DOH BEGAN A
PROCESS TO DEVELOP A MODEL AMHCD LAW
- The 1998 survey led the DOH to examine potential
reasons for this low rate of knowledge and use of
AMHCDs - It was determined that Hawaiis law was
inadequate as a basis for AMHCDs - After stakeholder consultation, a bill was
introduced in 2003 legislative session and was
passed by the 2004 legislature
29SB 1238 SD2 HD2 CD1
- The bill was approved as Act 224 by Governor
Lingle on July 13, 2004 - The law became immediately effective
- Act 224 was codified by the reviser of statutes
as Chapter 327G, HRS - Act 224/Chapter 327G includes a sample form (aka,
the short form) which can be modified if
substance is retained.
30READ THE STATUTE ONLINE
http//www.capitol.hawaii.gov/site1/docs/docs.asp?
press1docs
31HAWAIIS AMHCD LAW STATES
- A competent adult can make instructions and
preferences for MH Tx - Can be combined with an end-of-life healthcare
directive per Chapter 437E - Can designate primary and back-up agents to make
treatment decisions - Must be written and either notarized or signed by
two competent witnesses
32HAWAIIS AMHCD STATES (Cont.)
- More recent AMHCDs take precedent over earlier
AMHCDs if in conflict - Can be revoked any time the consumer has capacity
and in any fashion (verbal) - Can not be revoked if consumer is found to lack
decision making capacity - Can be overridden by court order or if an
emergency situation (imminent harm to self or
others) exists
33DETERMINATION OF CAPACITY
- A determination that the person lacks capacity
must be jointly agreed upon by two people, one of
which must be a supervising physician and the
other either a physician or psychologist. - An Agent (proxy decision maker), if specified,
must be notified promptly upon loss of ability to
make healthcare decisions.
34DEFINITION OF CAPACITY
- Capacity is defined as a persons ability to
understand the significant benefits, risks, and
alternatives to proposed mental health care or
treatment and to make and communicate a mental
health care decision - A determination that the person has regained
decision making capacity can be made by the
supervising physician
35LIABILITY FOR NOT FOLLOWING
- Providers not complying with AMHCDs are liable
for damages and legal fees - However, providers are not required to provide
treatment contrary to generally accepted health
care standards - A exemption from liability is provided for
providers and designated agents acting in good
faith (e.g. unaware of AMHCD)
36ARE PROVIDERS AWARE OF HAWAIIS AMHCD LAW?
- Earlier research (1998) showed that only 7 of
consumers were aware of AMHCDs and only 1 had
completed an AMHCD - One of the best ways to inform consumers of the
opportunity to complete an AMHCD is through the
education that consumers receive from providers.
372004 HAWAII PROVIDER SURVEY
- To evaluate the effectiveness of the new law a
baseline provider survey was conducted during the
fall of 2004 - The objective of the survey was to assess
providers perspective on - Their own Awareness of the law
- Consumer Utilization of AMHCDs
- Consumer Satisfaction with AMHCDs
38SURVEY METHODOLOGY
- Developed a 6 Question Survey
- Distributed through the AMHD Office of Consumer
Affairs - Batches of surveys were mailed to the head of
each State owned or funded provider agency - Front line clinical staff were asked to complete
and return the survey by fax.
39SURVEY DISTRIBUTED TO ALL AMHD PROVIDERS
- Survey distributed to 1,290 providers and staff
including the following - CMHC (N 174)
- Clubhouse (N 49)
- HSH (N 400)
- POS (N 667)
40RESPONSE RATE
- Respondents
- CMHC 54/174 31
- HSH 17/400 4
- POS 154/667 23
- Unknown 15
- Total N 240/1290 18.6
- Return rate excluding HSH 25
41Question 1 - Awareness
- Are you aware that the State of Hawaii has a law
related to Advanced Mental Heath Care Directives? - N 240
lt 1
35
65
42Question 2 - Degree of Awareness
- As a mental health provider how familiar are you
with the details of the State of Hawaiis AMHCD
statute? - N 240
7
47
46
43Question 3 - Utilization
- In the past year, approximately how many Advance
Directives have been completed by consumers that
you are familiar with? - N 240
5
11
13
71
44Question 4 - Utilization
- Of the consumers with which you have regular
substantial contact approximately what percentage
have completed an AMHCD? - N 240
15
17
67
45Question 5 - Utilization
- Do you have direct knowledge of consumers whose
Advance Directives have been enacted as a result
of their loss of treatment making capacity? - N 240
lt 1
10
89
46Question 6 - Satisfaction
- If yes, how would you generally rate the overall
satisfaction of those consumers whose Advance
Directives were enacted? - N 29
17
29
42
47PROVIDER SURVEY CONCLUSIONS
- Bad News Low provider awareness and consumer
usage - 35 of providers were unaware of law
- Only 7 report being very familiar with the law
- 67 of all providers do not have contact with a
consumer who has completed an AMHCD - Good News Small group of providers are very
aware and know of consumers using AMHCDs - Satisfaction results mixed Providers reported
that approximately 60 of consumers were
satisfied with outcome (N23)
482005 Consumer Survey
- 13 Question Survey Administered by United Self
Help Consumer Assessment Team and MHSRET - Phone Surveys
- In-Person Surveys at 4 Clubhouse Programs
- Total of 748 Surveys with 738 usable
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59Summary of 2005 Consumer Survey
- Only 22 were aware of AMHCD Law
- Of this group, only 28 (n48) had ever
completed an AMHCD - Consistent with 1998 Survey this represents less
than 1 of the total sample - Consumers completing AMHCDs report being able
choose treatments (83) and proxy decision makers
(76). - 40 of consumers with AMHCDs have never had them
implemented. - When implemented, 80-90 of consumers report a
positive experience while 10-20 report a
negative or mixed experience.
60Sample Forms
- Can vary from simple to complex
- Trade-off between widespread use vs. legal
challenges - As forms become more complex, the fewer people
will complete them - Little case law exists on how the courts will
view these. - Chapter 327G provides basic form
61- Policy
- Consumers shall be afforded every opportunity to
have an advance mental health care directive
(AMHCD) that shall be easily accessed by
providers who will honor and respect the
consumers rights. - Practice
- Clinical and supervisory staff should be familiar
with Chapter 327G, HRS.
62Where to Get AMHCDs
- Short form can be downloaded from the amhd
website http//amhd.org by following for
consumers link - From the Bazelon Center website www.bazelon.org
- An adapted Bazelon plus Chapter 327G (the long
form) from the Hawaii Disability Rights Center
63http//www.nrc-pad.org/index.php
64Where might this go from here?
- Developing the AMHD ACCESS Line as a Central
Repository for Community - Providing Education to Hospital ERs, Providers
and Consumers - Legislative Change to Allow Identification on
Drivers License or State IDs
65Any Commentsor Questions?
66Mahalo for Your Attention!
- For More Information, Contact
- Hawaii Disability Rights Center
- 949-2922
- Toll free 1-800-882-1057
- www.bazelon.org
- http//amhd.org
67A. Michael Wylie, Ph.D.Associate Professor and
Director, Mental Health Services Research,
Evaluation, and Training Program of
the University of Hawaii at Manoa3465 Waialae
Avenue, Suite 200 Honolulu, Hawaii
96816www.mhsret.organd Consulting
Psychologist to the Adult Mental Health
Division3465 Waialae Avenue, Suite 200 Honolulu,
Hawaii 96816www.amhd.orgPhone
808-735-3435Fax 808-735-3436Email
wylie_at_hawaii.edu