Judges: J. Joseph Curran, Jr., Attorney General
Filed Date: 1/12/2006
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
You have requested our opinion whether a facility that provides treatment for individuals with mental disorders may accept an individual for voluntary admission at the request of a health care agent for the individual. In your letter, you point out that the law on voluntary admissions, §
For the reasons stated below, we conclude as follows: A facility that provides treatment for individuals with mental disorders may accept an individual for voluntary admission at the request of a health care agent for the individual if: (1) the health care agent is acting within the scope of his or her authority under a then-effective advance directive; (2) the health care agent will monitor the circumstances of the patient's course of treatment so as to be able to exercise judgment about the patient's retention or release; and (3) the patient does not express disagreement with the voluntary admission.
In 1910, the General Assembly authorized "any institution, hospital, home or retreat for the insane" to "receive and detain therein for purposes of care and treatment . . . anyone who is desirous of submitting himself for treatment. . . ." Chapter 715, § 1, Laws of Maryland 1910, amending Article 59, § 37. This statute prohibited facilities from accepting "a voluntary patient whose mental condition is such, or becomes such, that such person cannot comprehend the act of voluntary commitment, or be able to request his or her discharge, or give continuous assent to detention."
As the Mental Hygiene Law evolved over the years, this language remained essentially unchanged. Just prior to the 1982 recodification of the law into the Health-General Article, former Article 59, § 11(a) provided that any licensed mental health facility "may admit for purposes of care or treatment, or both, any person over the age of 16 years who has any mental disorder which is susceptible of care or treatment and who requests admission to such a facility." Voluntary admission was prohibited, however, unless the patient's condition "is such that he is able to understand the nature of his request for admission, is able to request his release, and is capable of giving continuous assent to his retention by the facility." Former Article 59, § 11(b).
In 1982, when the Health-General Article was enacted, these provisions were recodified into § 10-609. The relevant language, which was said by the Revisor's Note to have been derived without substantive change from former Article 59, § 11 and which has not been amended since, is as follows:
(a) Application for voluntary admission of an individual to a facility may be made under this section by the individual, if the individual is 16 years old or older.
(b) The applicant shall:
(1) Submit a formal, written application that contains the personal information and is on the form required by the [Mental Hygiene] Administration; or
(2) In formally request admission.
(c) A facility may not admit an individual under this section unless:
(1) The individual has a mental disorder;
(2) The mental disorder is susceptible to care or treatment;
(3) The individual understands the nature of the request for admission;
(4) The individual is able to give continuous assent to retention by the facility; and
(5) The individual is able to ask for release.
Unquestionably, when this provision was first enacted nearly a century ago, only the individual could have authorized his or her voluntary admission to a facility. Later recodifications did not themselves change this outcome.
However, the language in § 10-609 is not to be interpreted in isolation. A statute is not immune from changed interpretation merely because its own text has not changed. Other enactments by the General Assembly might affect the interpretation. The goal is to "try to read statutes in harmony, so that all provisions can be given reasonable effect." Yox v. Tru-Rol Co., Inc.,
B. Health Care Agency via Advance Directives
In 1969, the General Assembly enacted Maryland's first durable power of attorney statute. Chapter 4, Laws of Maryland 1969. This statute abrogated the common law rule that, "[w]here an agent-principal relationship exists and the principal thereafter loses the requisite mental capacity, the agency is generally held terminated." Kuder v. United Nat'l Bank,
In 1988, an opinion of this Office pointed out that, while the focus of the durable power of attorney statute was undoubtedly on commercial and similar financial matters, this legal instrument could be used to create a health care agency. Thus, we endorsed the concept of a durable power of attorney for health care, under which an individual with capacity designates someone to make medical decisions once the individual is no longer able to do so: "A person (the principal) may use a durable power of attorney to direct an agent (the attorney in fact) to carry out the principal's specific directive concerning medical treatment. . . . Alternatively, a principal may choose to empower the attorney in fact to make all medical decisions on his or her behalf, rather than directing a specific treatment decision." 73 Opinions of the Attorney General 162, 184 (1988).
In 1993, as part of the Health Care Decisions Act, the General Assembly explicitly authorized the use of an advance directive to select one's preferred health care agent and to define the scope of the agent's medical decision making authority: "Any competent individual may, at any time, make a written advance directive appointing an agent to make health care decisions for the individual under the circumstances stated in the advance directive." § 5-602(b)(2).2 The Health Care Decisions Act itself does not define the authority of a health care agent; rather, the agent's authority exists "under the circumstances stated in the advance directive." Notably, the Act does not restrict an individual from granting the health care agent authority across the range of somatic and psychiatric disorders. By contrast, the Act bars a surrogate decision maker — that is, a family member or friend of the patient who, in the absence of a health care agent, is accorded decision-making authority under a statutory priority list — from authorizing "treatment for a mental disorder." § 5-605(d)(2).3
In 2001, the General Assembly sought to encourage planning for future mental health care by means of advance directives. In the preamble to Chapter 267 of the Laws of Maryland 2001, the General Assembly declared that "[a]n advance directive for health care allows an individual, when capable of making an informed decision about health care, to specify services he or she would wish to receive if he or she became incapable of making such a decision in the future or to authorize an agent to make health care decisions on the individual's behalf in such a circumstance." The preamble further endorsed a prior study recommendation "that efforts be made to afford individuals with a mental disorder an opportunity to execute an advance directive for mental health services." In furtherance of this objective, the General Assembly enacted § 5-602.1, which confirms the right of a competent individual to make an advance directive "to outline the mental health services which may be provided to the individual if the individual becomes incompetent," to designate "an agent to make mental health services decisions for the [individual]," or both. § 5-602.1(b) and (d)(1). Significantly, the statute authorizes an advance directive for mental health services to include "the identification of mental health professionals, programs, andfacilities that the [individual] would prefer to provide mental health services." § 5-602.1(d)(2) (emphasis added).4
Section 5-602.1(a) contains a definition of "mental health services," in the form of a cross-reference to the definition in §
C. Conclusion: Authority to Request Voluntary Admission
Reading these provisions together, we conclude that the reference to the "individual" in § 10-609 should be construed to mean not only the individual acting personally but also the individual acting through an appropriately empowered health care agent. This construction harmonizes the voluntary admission provisions of the Mental Hygiene Law with the later enacted statutes authorizing health care agency. Because it honors the autonomous decision of individuals with mental disorders to rely on their health care agents for a range of care decisions, this construction also is consistent with the State's declared public policy of providing "without partiality care and treatment to citizens who have mental disorders." § 10-102(2).5
We recognize that the statute on guardianships of the person provides that "no one may be committed to a mental facility without an involuntary commitment proceeding as provided by law." Annotated Code of Maryland, Estates and Trusts Article ("ET"), §
When a health care agent seeks to obtain the voluntary admission of an individual to a facility, the facility should carefully review the content of the advance directive. As discussed above, the scope of authority of a health care agent is determined by the individual. It can be very broad, conveying authority with respect to all health care decisions, or more narrowly circumscribed. It can have exceptions. Consequently, the facility must determine, as an initial step, that the authority to request the patient's admission is within the scope of authority conveyed by the advance directive.
In some situations, the individual who executed the advance directive, observing how the agent is carrying out the authority, may seek to revoke it. Proper revocation of an advance directive would, of course, negate the agent's authority, not just about the proposed admission but in all other respects as well. A potentially difficult issue about revocation is the individual's capacity to do so. Under § 5-604, a "declarant" may revoke an advance directive either in writing or orally, under the procedures specified in that section.6 A declarant is "a competent individual who makes an advance directive while capable of making and communicating an informed decision." § 5-601(g). A "competent individual," in turn, means an adult or an emancipated minor "who has not been determined to be incapable of an informed decision." § 5-601(f).7 Thus, the revocation of an advance directive by an individual with a mental disorder must be respected unless the mental disorder has rendered the individual incapable of understanding the nature of the decision to revoke the prior selection of a health care agent and the consequences of doing so.8
B. Monitoring the Patient's Situation
The enactment of the Health Care Decisions Act's provisions on advance directives in effect added a new group of potential applicants for voluntary admission, but these provisions did not amend the admission limitations themselves. That is, the limitations on voluntary admission in § 10-609(c) remain in effect. In light of the advance directive provisions, however, these criteria can be satisfied by either the individual personally or the individual's authorized agent.
Consequently, a facility may not agree to the voluntary admission of an individual at the instance of the health care agent, even one appropriately empowered by an advance directive, unless all of the criteria in § 10-609(c) are met: The patient has a mental disorder that is susceptible to care or treatment in the facility, the agent understands the nature of what will happen to the patient as a result of the admission, the agent will be able to give continuous assent to the patient's retention by the facility, and the agent will be able to ask for the patient's release. The facility should gain an explicit commitment from the agent to perform the monitoring implied by the "continuous assent" and "ask for release" provisions. Moreover, the facility should deem the voluntary admission no longer valid if the health care agent is in fact not monitoring the situation sufficiently to exercise these rights in an informed way.
C. Absence of Express Disagreement by the Patient
Only the Health Care Decisions Act authorizes a health care agent to take the "action" of requesting the voluntary admission of an individual to a facility.9 Section 5-611(e)(2) of the Act provides that "[n]othing in this subtitle authorizes any action with respect to medical treatment, if the health care provider is aware that the patient for whom the health care is provided has expressed disagreement with the action." Therefore, the facility may not accept the request if the patient "has expressed disagreement with the action."
Unlike the prerequisite for revoking an advance directive, a patient need not be competent in order to express disagreement. Not only does this provision, by contrast with the provision on revoking an advance directive, omit any reference to capacity, but its history also makes clear that it was included precisely to protect patients who lack capacity from being coerced, without judicial oversight, into treatment to which they object.10
What counts as "expressed disagreement with the action"? The term is not defined, and it was not explained in the Act's legislative history.11
The lack of a definition and the reference to a health care provider's "awareness" of the disagreement imply that a facility may exercise reasonable discretion in deciding whether a given statement constitutes express disagreement with the action of voluntary commitment. Sometimes, of course, a patient's verbal expression of disagreement will be clear and unambiguous. For example, if the patient states, "No, I don't want to go into the hospital," that is an expressed disagreement which vitiates, at least temporarily, the agent's authority and prevents the facility from taking the action of admitting the patient. Perhaps the individual will change his or her mind later, but as long as this focused disagreement with the action remains, voluntary admission is not possible.12
Yet, a verbal expression might be ambiguous, even if it is negative in tone. For example, the unelaborated words "No, no" might be a lament about poor health or an expression of general unhappiness or frustration, not necessarily an expressed disagreement with the action. Much may depend on the context of the statement and the behavior that accompanies it. If the behavior is cooperative, this fact would support the facility's conclusion that the statement is not an expressed disagreement with the action. Cf. Oregon v. Doran,
J. Joseph Curran, Jr. Attorney General
Jack Schwartz Assistant Attorney General
Robert N. McDonald Chief Counsel Opinions and Advice