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Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by: Mark W. Binkley, J.D. General Counsel, South Carolina Department of Mental Health This work is for general information only and is not offered as legal advice. As needed, consult with legal counsel for your organization. All rights reserved. Reproduction, use, and/or distribution of all or part of this work in any form without the express written permission of SCDMH is prohibited. © 2012 SCDMH.
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Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

Apr 06, 2018

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Page 1: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

Psychiatric Emergency Admission in

South Carolina and Hospital Emergency

Departments: Legal Considerations

Presented by:

Mark W. Binkley, J.D.

General Counsel,

South Carolina Department of Mental Health

This work is for general information only and is not offered as legal

advice. As needed, consult with legal counsel for your organization. All

rights reserved. Reproduction, use, and/or distribution of all or part of

this work in any form without the express written permission of SCDMH

is prohibited. © 2012 SCDMH.

Page 2: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

1) Governed by Constitutional & State Law

2) Required procedures and criteria are specified in

State Law (§44-17-410, S.C. Code of Laws)

3) If legal requirements met, State law allows but

does not require, involuntary treatment and

detention

4) Failure to follow State law may expose

participants to claims of false arrest, assault and

battery, defamation, denial of civil rights, etc.

Page 3: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

Code of Laws of South Carolina (SC Code):

1) Adult with Mental Illness: Chapter 17 2) Child in Need of Treatment: Chapter 24 3) Adult Chemical Dependency: Chapter 52 While they are separate laws, the legal protections, procedures, and forms are similar. County Probate Court has jurisdiction over Civil Commitment matters. Some processes ancillary to to the civil commitment process may vary based on local resources or practice.

Page 4: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

42 CFR 413: EMTALA obligations

42 CFR Part 482: Conditions of Participation

§44-7-260(E), SC Code: Emergency Care

§44-66-10, SC Code: Adult HealthCare Consent

Act

Page 5: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

Both are significant legal and medical events that permit involuntary detention Both are governed by and subject to specific constitutional and statutory law But they are different legal/medical events

Page 6: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

1) A Probate Court may civilly commit a person after a court hearing by finding “clear and convincing evidence” that the person needs involuntary treatment for mental illness. 2) This hearing may occur after an Emergency Admission, or in a non-emergency, before involuntary treatment & detention. (Judicial Admission”)

Page 7: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

1)If the person has a behavioral health

emergency requiring immediate, involuntary hospitalization, the person may be hospitalized using the

Emergency Admission procedure under State Law.

2)Emergency Admission permits short

term involuntary hospitalization while judicial civil commitment proceedings are underway.

Page 8: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

SC Code §44-17-450 & 460: 1) Prior to a DMH psychiatric Emergency

Admission, examining physician must consult Mental Health Center (MHC) about the person’s condition & admission alternatives.

2) Consult is not a substitute for local hospital

EMTALA or other required emergency services. Some hospitals contract with local MHCs to provide other services or the county provides additional funds for additional MHC emergency services.

Page 9: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

Basic EMTALA obligations (within ED capability):

Examine/Evaluate/stabilize Emergency Medical

Condition (EMC) including one of psych origin prior

to a transfer to accepting hospital with greater

ability to treat.

Emergency Admission criteria are substantially the

same as for an EMTALA Psych/A&D EMC. If the

EMC is stabilized, the person may no longer meet

legal criteria for Emergency Admission.

Page 10: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

1) APPLICATION (sworn statement with facts

supporting belief that person needs Emergency Admission)

2) EXAMINATION/CERTIFICATION (physician examination and opinion that subject person needs Emergency Admission)

3) CUSTODY/TRANSPORT for admission (Law Enforcement, maybe family, EMS?)

Page 11: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

A sworn statement from Applicant including specific facts supporting Applicant’s belief that (ALL THREE):

1) Person has a mental illness which

2) presents an immediate risk of serious

harm to self/others,

3) if person is not immediately

hospitalized.

APPLICATION (By Anyone)

Page 12: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

1) If applicant also states that the person can’t be examined voluntarily, Probate

Court may issue a Detention Order. 2) Detention Order (a.k.a. “pick up

order”, valid for 72 hours) requires that law enforcement take custody of person for up to 24 hrs solely for physician to examine person for possible Certification for Emergency Admission.

APPLICATION (Cont.)

Page 13: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

1) If examining physician DOES NOT Certify Emergency Admission: The process ends (with any Detention Order). If non-emergency, and involuntary treatment still needed, may Petition Probate Court for a Judicial Admission.

2) If examining physician DOES Certify: The

completed Application & Certification (Emergency Admission “papers”) then permit Emergency Admission to facility named on Certification.

Page 14: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

CUSTODY/TRANSPORT (Additional EMTALA Obligations May Apply)

1) The completed Emergency Admission

papers authorize law enforcement to take custody and transport person to facility named in Certification.

2) If Emergency Admission to facility

named on Certification is by transfer from local hospital ED, additional EMTALA requirements usually apply.

Page 15: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:
Page 16: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

“Shouldn’t local hospital ED doctors always re-certify papers, even after they expire, because: The patient has already been committed to DMH?” The patient is a ward of the State or

otherwise is under SCDMH or other State jurisdiction? ”

Page 17: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

ANSWER: Emergency Admission papers permit, but do not require an Emergency Admission. 1) While in the ED, the person is neither

civilly committed or emergently admitted, and is not under “jurisdiction” of or a “ward” of the State.

2) Unless and until the person is transferred and admitted to a hospital named in the Certification, the person remains a patient of the ED.

3) Even when the person is the subject of Emergency Admission papers, the person is still presumed by law to have legal capacity.

Page 18: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

ANSWER: • A person for whom a certificate has

been issued may not be admitted on the basis of that certificate after the expiration of three calendar days after the date of the examination;

• When the certification expires, whatever

authority the ED has to involuntarily detain the person based on the certification also expires.

Page 19: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

ANSWER:

• If before the Certification expires (original or subsequent), the person then no longer needs Emergency Admission, the person may be re-examined by a physician & “decertified” for Emergency Admission.

• This MAY also end further EMTALA and other ED obligations.

Page 20: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

ANSWER:

• In addition to the authority which completed Emergency Admission papers, (Application & Certification) provide the ED, hospitals may have other authority to hold and treat the patient (e.g. §44-66-10 SC SC Code, Adult Health Care Consent Act; §44-13-10, SC Code, County designated facility for temporary detention pending a DMH admission.)

Page 21: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

“If the ED physician states/demonstrates that the patient is “medically stable”, how can the SCDMH hospital refuse to accept the patient if there is an available bed?”

Page 22: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

In addition to SC Code requirements permitting a Emergency Admission, if admission is from a hospital ED, EMTALA requires an “appropriate transfer” to a “receiving facility” (e.g. DMH hospital) which has accepted the transfer for treatment and care within the receiving facility’s individual “capacity and capability”.

Page 23: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

ANSWER:

DMH facilities are limited license facilities

without medical or surgical capability. In

some cases, an ED patient could be

“stable” in the view of the ED physician,

but the patient’s medical care and

treatment needs may exceed the DMH

facility’s capability, even if there is an

available bed.

Page 24: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

Also, EMTALA (and prudent practice) usually requires that the hospital

attempting transfer, consider the transfer risks and benefits and then determine and document that during the transfer (e.g. to a DMH facility), that the patient’s condition is not likely to significantly deteriorate.

Page 25: Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and … · Psychiatric Emergency Admission in South Carolina and Hospital Emergency Departments: Legal Considerations Presented by:

A patient’s “stability” for transfer from a local ED should consider the “capacity and capability” of the receiving facility, as well as duration (often more than 1 hr) and type of transport (often handcuffed in back of law enforcement vehicle.)