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CCHR Buffalo
PO Box 712
Buffalo, NY 14207
Email
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Rights of Outpatients
in all outpatient programs licensed or run by the Office of Mental
Health
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Rights of Outpatients in all outpatient programs licensed
or run by the Office of Mental Health
From the Commissioner of Mental Health
"One of our important roles at the State Office
of Mental Health is to offer meaningful information to
help people make choices and decisions about mental health
issues. It is our hope that an understanding of the rights
of outpatients will help foster respectful relationships
between people who use mental health services, family
members, staff people and members of the community."
Sharon Carpinello, RN, Ph.D
New York State
Commissioner of Mental Health
The rights of people in outpatient mental health programs
are protected by both law and regulation.
The State Office of Mental Health (OMH) licenses outpatient
programs in five categories –– clinic, continuing
day treatment, day treatment for children, intensive psychiatric
rehabilitation treatment and partial hospitalization.
In 2005, OMH also began a phased implementation process
for the issuance of Personalized Recovery Oriented Services
(PROS) licenses. A new comprehensive recovery-oriented
program model that integrates treatment, support and rehabilitation
services, PROS has four service components: Community
Rehabilitation and Support; Intensive Rehabilitation;
Ongoing Rehabilitation and Support; and Clinical treatment.
Generally, you will not stay overnight in an outpatient
program.
Your civil rights continue if you participate in an outpatient
program. The law specifically mentions your continued
right to register and vote in elections, apply for permits
and licenses, take civil service tests and apply for jobs
and be appointed without discrimination if you qualify.
Under the law you have the right to be treated confidentially,
with respect and dignity by all staff people.
Treatment or access to programs may not be limited or
denied because of race, creed, color, sex, national origin,
age, marital status, or disabilities which are unrelated
to treatment. If you think that you are being discriminated
against on any of these grounds —— or if you
believe that you are a victim of mental, verbal, physical
or sexual abuse —— this booklet tells where
you may file an official complaint.
The fact that you are receiving psychiatric treatment
does not mean you are mentally incompetent. You are considered
legally competent unless a judge has ruled that you are
incompetent.
You also have the same right as other citizens to designate
a "health care proxy" or prepare an "advance
directive." Because some people have recurring episodes
of mental illness, these documents may be of particular
interest to people who use mental health services. The
documents allow you to provide instructions about your
future treatment, to be used later if you are unable to
give instructions at the time you are being treated.
Basic Information
When you are admitted to an outpatient program or shortly
after, you should be informed about your rights. These
rights may be restricted only upon written order of a
physician. Any such order must be placed in your clinical
record and must state the clinical justification for the
limitation and the specific time period when it will remain
in effect. Your rights may not be limited as punishment
or for the convenience of staff people.
These rights include:
- The right to a safe and sanitary environment.
- The right to a balanced and nutritious diet, if meals
are served at an outpatient program.
- The right to practice religion.
- The right to freedom from abuse and mistreatment by
employees.
- The right to a reasonable amount of safe storage space
for clothing and personal property.
- The right to a reasonable degree of privacy, including
bathroom privacy.
- The right to receive visitors at reasonable times, to
have privacy when visited, and to communicate freely with
persons within or outside the program location.
- The right to an individualized service plan and a full
explanation of the services provided, and the right to
participate in the development of your individualized
service plan.
- The right to be informed of the provider’’s
grievance policies and procedures, and the right to bring
any questions or complaints to the director of the program
or the organizations listed at the back of this booklet.
- The right to authorize family members and other adults
who will be given priority to visit, according to an individual’’s
ability to receive visitors.
- The right to receive clinically appropriate care and
treatment suited to your needs and skillfully, safely
and humanely administered with full respect for your dignity
and personal integrity.
- The right to be treated in a way which acknowledges
and respects your cultural environment.
In a separate category, your outpatient program may inform
you about these additional elements, although they are
not rights set forth in law or regulation:
- The name of the staff member who will have primary responsibility,
for example, as your principal contact person or personal
service coordinator.
- Alternate treatments available to you.
- The rules of conduct in your program.
- The cost of treatment.
- The limit, if there is one, on how long you can stay
in the program.
- The program's relationship with other agencies regarding
additional services.
- The program's source of funding.
- The authority under which the program operates.
Participation and Objections
For most people, participating in an outpatient program
is voluntary. Occasionally someone is ordered by a court
to obtain outpatient services under the Assisted Outpatient
Treatment Program (also known as Kendra's Law) or as a
condition of parole from prison. While your full participation
in the program is a central goal, if you object to your
individualized service plan, or if it is not working to
your satisfaction and you want it changed, that alone
is not reason to discharge you from the program. Periodically,
you can expect to review your plan with staffmpeople to
look at your progress. You can be discharged if participation
is no longer clinically appropriate or if you engage in
conduct which poses a risk of physical harm to yourself
or others.
You have the right to make an informed choice on whether
you will participate in research projects. These could
involve new medications, a series of questions posed by
an interviewer or questionnaires. If you refuse to participate,
a program cannot use that as grounds to deny you further
treatment. If you decide to participate, your signed informed
consent is required.
Privacy and Confidentiality
The law protects your right to privacy and confidentiality
during treatment. This includes conversations between
you and staff people who provide services, and information
in your record. You have the right to see your treatment
record unless there is a clinical reason why you should
not, and to request that your physician discuss your treatment
record with you. You may ask to have your record sent
to any other service provider or your attorney. If you
are under age 18, a parent or
legal guardian may make this request.
The Office of Mental Health will provide you with a separate
Notice of Privacy Practices that will tell you how we
use and disclose your confidential mental health treatment
information. It will also tell you what your rights are
with regard to your mental health treatment information,
and who you can contact if you have questions or a complaint
about how we have used or shared your treatment records.
Generally, information from your treatment record cannot
be released without your written consent. In limited circumstances,
however, the law may allow or require release of records
or information to certain individuals, governmental agencies
or provider organizations. Most disclosures will be noted
in your record, and you are entitled to learn about them
upon request. The law states that notations do not have
to be kept when records are disclosed to the Mental Hygiene
Legal Service, quality of care reviewers or government
finance agents dealing with payments. The law also says
that for disclosures made to insurance companies licensed
under the State Insurance Law, such a notation needs to
be entered only at the time the disclosure is first made.
Access to Records
You must be given an opportunity to inspect your clinical
record when you have submitted a written request. The
law does allow some limitations on this access, based
on clinical justification. A program can impose a reasonable
charge for all inspections and copies. The charge cannot
exceed what these services actually cost the program.
In no case can a program charge more than 75 cents per
page.
If you disagree with some part of your record, you can
submit a written statement challenging the information
in the record to be permanently attached to the record.
Problems or Complaints
You have the right to information on how to make a complaint.
A provider of service must give a notice of recipients'
rights to each person upon admission, and post the rights
in a conspicuous location. If you have a problem or complaint,
the person who runs the program is responsible for making
sure your rights are protected. If this does not work,
or is inappropriate, there are other organizations that
can help.
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The Citizens Commission on Human Rights
(CCHR) is a non-profit, public benefit organization dedicated
to investigating and exposing psychiatric violations of human
rights. Email us, call
us at (716) 200-1400 or fill out an
abuse form now if you have any psychiatric abuse case(s) to
report regarding yourself or someone you know. Any information
you submit will be held in the strictest of confidence.

Think Psychiatry has nothing to do with you?
THINK AGAIN.


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