SENATE BILL No. 867

 

 

September 24, 2009, Introduced by Senators BRATER, JACOBS, CLARK-COLEMAN, CLARKE, SCOTT, CHERRY, OLSHOVE, ANDERSON, BASHAM, SWITALSKI and THOMAS and referred to the Committee on Health Policy.

 

 

 

     A bill to amend 1974 PA 258, entitled

 

"Mental health code,"

 

by amending sections 754 and 755 (MCL 330.1754 and 330.1755),

 

section 754 as amended by 2006 PA 604 and section 755 as added by

 

1995 PA 290.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

     Sec. 754. (1) The department shall establish a state office of

 

recipient rights subordinate only to the director.

 

     (2) The department shall ensure all of the following:

 

     (a) The process for funding the state office of recipient

 

rights includes a review of the funding by the state recipient

 

rights advisory committee.

 

     (b) The state office of recipient rights will be protected

 


from pressures that could interfere with the impartial, even-

 

handed, and thorough performance of its duties.

 

     (c) The state office of recipient rights will have unimpeded

 

access to all of the following:

 

     (i) All programs and services operated by or under contract

 

with the department except where other recipient rights systems

 

authorized by this act exist.

 

     (ii) All staff employed by or under contract with the

 

department.

 

     (iii) All evidence necessary to conduct a thorough investigation

 

or to fulfill its monitoring function.

 

     (d) Staff of the state office of recipient rights receive

 

training each year in recipient rights protection.

 

     (e) Each contract between the department and a provider

 

requires both of the following:

 

     (i) That the provider and his or her employees receive annual

 

training in recipient rights protection.

 

     (ii) That recipients will be protected from rights violations

 

while they are receiving services under the contract.

 

     (f) Technical assistance and training in recipient rights

 

protection are available to all community mental health services

 

programs and other mental health service providers subject to this

 

act.

 

     (3) The department shall endeavor to ensure all of the

 

following:

 

     (a) The state office of recipient rights has sufficient staff

 

and other resources necessary to perform the duties described in

 


this section.

 

     (b) Complainants, staff of the state office of recipient

 

rights, and any staff acting on behalf of a recipient will be

 

protected from harassment or retaliation resulting from recipient

 

rights activities.

 

     (c) Appropriate remedial action is taken to resolve violations

 

of rights and notify the complainants of substantiated violations

 

in a manner that does not violate employee rights.

 

     (4) After consulting with the state recipient rights advisory

 

committee, the department director shall select a director of the

 

state office of recipient rights who has the education, training,

 

and experience to fulfill the responsibilities of the office. The

 

department director shall not replace or dismiss the director of

 

the state office of recipient rights without first consulting the

 

state recipient rights advisory committee. The director of the

 

state office of recipient rights shall have no direct service

 

responsibility. The director of the state office of recipient

 

rights shall report directly and solely to the department director.

 

The department director shall not delegate his or her

 

responsibility under this subsection.

 

     (5) The state office of recipient rights may do all of the

 

following:

 

     (a) Investigate apparent or suspected violations of the rights

 

guaranteed by this chapter.

 

     (b) Resolve disputes relating to violations.

 

     (c) Act on behalf of recipients to obtain appropriate remedies

 

for any apparent violations.

 


     (d) Apply for and receive grants, gifts, and bequests to

 

effectuate any purpose of this chapter.

 

     (6) The state office of recipient rights shall do all of the

 

following:

 

     (a) Ensure that recipients, parents of minor recipients, and

 

guardians or other legal representatives have access to summaries

 

of the rights guaranteed by this chapter and chapter 7a and are

 

notified of those rights in an understandable manner, both at the

 

time services are requested and periodically during the time

 

services are provided to the recipient.

 

     (b) Ensure that the telephone number and address of the office

 

of recipient rights and the names of rights officers are

 

conspicuously posted in all service sites.

 

     (c) Maintain a record system for all reports of apparent or

 

suspected rights violations received, including a mechanism for

 

logging in all complaints and a mechanism for secure storage of all

 

investigative documents and evidence.

 

     (d) Initiate actions that are appropriate and necessary to

 

safeguard and protect rights guaranteed by this chapter to

 

recipients of services provided directly by the department or by

 

its contract providers other than community mental health services

 

programs.

 

     (e) Receive reports of apparent or suspected violations of

 

rights guaranteed by this chapter. The state office of recipient

 

rights shall refer reports of apparent or suspected rights

 

violations to the recipient rights office of the appropriate

 

provider to be addressed by the provider's internal rights

 


protection mechanisms. The state office shall intervene as

 

necessary to act on behalf of recipients in situations in which the

 

department director of the department considers the rights

 

protection system of the provider to be out of compliance with this

 

act and rules promulgated under this act.

 

     (f) Upon request, advise recipients of the process by which a

 

rights complaint or appeal may be made and assist recipients in

 

preparing written rights complaints and appeals.

 

     (g) Advise recipients that there are advocacy organizations

 

available to assist recipients in preparing written rights

 

complaints and appeals and offer to refer recipients to those

 

organizations.

 

     (h) Upon receipt of a complaint, advise the complainant of the

 

complaint process, appeal process, and mediation option.

 

     (i) Ensure that each service site operated by the department

 

or by a provider under contract with the department, other than a

 

community mental health services program, is visited by recipient

 

rights staff with the frequency necessary for protection of rights

 

but in no case less than annually.

 

     (j) Ensure that all individuals employed by the department

 

receive department-approved training related to recipient rights

 

protection before or within 30 days after being employed.

 

     (k) Ensure that all reports of apparent or suspected

 

violations of rights within state facilities or programs operated

 

by providers under contract with the department other than

 

community mental health services programs are investigated in

 

accordance with section 778 and that those reports that do not

 


warrant investigation are recorded in accordance with subdivision

 

(c).

 

     (l) Review semiannual statistical rights data submitted by

 

community mental health services programs and licensed hospitals to

 

determine trends and patterns in the protection of recipient rights

 

in the public mental health system and provide a summary of the

 

data to community mental health services programs and to the

 

department director. of the department.

 

     (m) Serve as consultant to the director in matters related to

 

recipient rights.

 

     (n) At least quarterly, provide summary complaint data

 

consistent with the annual report required in subdivision (o),

 

together with a summary of remedial action taken on substantiated

 

complaints, to the department and the state recipient rights

 

advisory committee.

 

     (o) Submit to the department director and to the committees

 

and subcommittees of the legislature with legislative oversight of

 

mental health matters, for availability to the public, an annual

 

report on the current status of recipient rights for the state. The

 

report shall be submitted not later than March 31 of each year for

 

the preceding fiscal year. The annual report shall include, at a

 

minimum, all of the following:

 

     (i) Summary data by type or category regarding the rights of

 

recipients receiving services from the department including the

 

number of complaints received by each state facility and other

 

state-operated placement agency, the number of reports filed, and

 

the number of reports investigated.

 


     (ii) The number of substantiated rights violations by category

 

and by state facility.

 

     (iii) The remedial actions taken on substantiated rights

 

violations by category and by state facility.

 

     (iv) Training received by staff of the state office of

 

recipient rights.

 

     (v) Training provided by the state office of recipient rights

 

to staff of contract providers.

 

     (vi) Outcomes of assessments of the recipient rights system of

 

each community mental health services program.

 

     (vii) Identification of patterns and trends in rights

 

protection in the public mental health system in this state.

 

     (viii) Review of budgetary issues including staffing and

 

financial resources.

 

     (ix) Summary of the results of any consumer satisfaction

 

surveys conducted.

 

     (x) Recommendations to the department.

 

     (p) Annually survey a randomly selected sample of applicants

 

whose names and contact information have been provided under

 

section 755(7). The office shall use the survey to do all of the

 

following:

 

     (i) Develop statewide baseline data on applicants denied mental

 

health service.

 

     (ii) Determine trends and patterns related to mental health

 

service denials.

 

     (iii) Identify specific circumstances that may warrant

 

investigation of possible rights violations.

 


     (q) (p) Provide education and training to its recipient rights

 

advisory committee and its recipient rights appeals committee.

 

     Sec. 755. (1) Each community mental health services program

 

and each licensed hospital shall establish an office of recipient

 

rights subordinate only to the executive director or hospital

 

director.

 

     (2) Each community mental health services program and each

 

licensed hospital shall ensure all of the following:

 

     (a) Education and training in recipient rights policies and

 

procedures are provided to its recipient rights advisory committee

 

and its recipient rights appeals committee.

 

     (b) The process for funding the office of recipient rights

 

includes a review of the funding by the recipient rights advisory

 

committee.

 

     (c) The office of recipient rights will be protected from

 

pressures that could interfere with the impartial, even-handed, and

 

thorough performance of its duties.

 

     (d) The office of recipient rights will have unimpeded access

 

to all of the following:

 

     (i) All programs and services operated by or under contract

 

with the community mental health services program or licensed

 

hospital.

 

     (ii) All staff employed by or under contract with the community

 

mental health services program or licensed hospital.

 

     (iii) All evidence necessary to conduct a thorough investigation

 

or to fulfill its monitoring function.

 

     (e) Staff of the office of recipient rights receive training

 


each year in recipient rights protection.

 

     (f) Each contract between the community mental health services

 

program or licensed hospital and a provider requires both of the

 

following:

 

     (i) That the provider and his or her employees receive

 

recipient rights training.

 

     (ii) That recipients will be protected from rights violations

 

while they are receiving services under the contract.

 

     (3) Each community mental health services program and each

 

licensed hospital shall endeavor to ensure all of the following:

 

     (a) Complainants, staff of the office of recipient rights, and

 

any staff acting on behalf of a recipient will be protected from

 

harassment or retaliation resulting from recipient rights

 

activities and that appropriate disciplinary action will be taken

 

if there is evidence of harassment or retaliation.

 

     (b) Appropriate remedial action is taken to resolve violations

 

of rights and notify that the complainants are notified of

 

substantiated violations in a manner that does not violate employee

 

rights.

 

     (4) The executive director or hospital director shall select a

 

director of the office of recipient rights who has the education,

 

training, and experience to fulfill the responsibilities of the

 

office. The executive director shall not select, replace, or

 

dismiss the director of the office of recipient rights without

 

first consulting the recipient rights advisory committee. The

 

director of the office of recipient rights shall have no direct

 

clinical service responsibility.

 


     (5) Each office of recipient rights established under this

 

section shall do all of the following:

 

     (a) Provide or coordinate the protection of recipient rights

 

for all directly operated or contracted services.

 

     (b) Ensure that recipients, parents of minor recipients, and

 

guardians or other legal representatives have access to summaries

 

of the rights guaranteed by this chapter and chapter 7a and are

 

notified of those rights in an understandable manner, both at the

 

time services are initiated and periodically during the time

 

services are provided to the recipient.

 

     (c) Ensure that the telephone number and address of the office

 

of recipient rights and the names of rights officers are

 

conspicuously posted in all service sites.

 

     (d) Maintain a record system for all reports of apparent or

 

suspected rights violations received within the community mental

 

health services program system or the licensed hospital system,

 

including a mechanism for logging in all complaints and a mechanism

 

for secure storage of all investigative documents and evidence.

 

     (e) Ensure that each service site is visited with the

 

frequency necessary for protection of rights but in no case less

 

than annually.

 

     (f) Ensure that all individuals employed by the community

 

mental health services program, contract agency, or licensed

 

hospital receive training related to recipient rights protection

 

before or within 30 days after being employed.

 

     (g) Review the recipient rights policies and the rights system

 

of each provider of mental health services under contract with the

 


community mental health services program or licensed hospital to

 

ensure that the rights protection system of each provider is in

 

compliance with this act and is of a uniformly high standard.

 

     (h) Serve as consultant to the executive director or hospital

 

director and to staff of the community mental health services

 

program or licensed hospital in matters related to recipient

 

rights.

 

     (i) Ensure that all reports of apparent or suspected

 

violations of rights within the community mental health services

 

program system or licensed hospital system are investigated in

 

accordance with section 778 and that those reports that do not

 

warrant investigation are recorded in accordance with subdivision

 

(d).

 

     (j) Semiannually provide summary complaint data consistent

 

with the annual report required in subsection (6), together with a

 

summary of remedial action taken on substantiated complaints by

 

category, to the department and to the recipient rights advisory

 

committee of the community mental health services program or

 

licensed hospital.

 

     (6) The executive director or hospital director shall submit

 

to the board of the community mental health services program or the

 

governing board of the licensed hospital and the department an

 

annual report prepared by the office of recipient rights on the

 

current status of recipient rights in the community mental health

 

services program system or licensed hospital system and a review of

 

the operations of the office of recipient rights. The report shall

 

be submitted not later than December 30 of each year for the

 


preceding fiscal year or period specified in contract. The annual

 

report shall include, at a minimum, all of the following:

 

     (a) Summary data by category regarding the rights of

 

recipients receiving services from the community mental health

 

services program or licensed hospital including complaints

 

received, the number of reports filed, and the number of reports

 

investigated by provider.

 

     (b) The number of substantiated rights violations by category

 

and provider.

 

     (c) The remedial actions taken on substantiated rights

 

violations by category and provider.

 

     (d) Training received by staff of the office of recipient

 

rights.

 

     (e) Training provided by the office of recipient rights to

 

contract providers.

 

     (f) Desired outcomes established for the office of recipient

 

rights and progress toward these outcomes.

 

     (g) Recommendations to the community mental health services

 

program board or licensed hospital governing board.

 

     (7) Each community mental health services program and each

 

licensed hospital shall endeavor to obtain names of and contact

 

information for all mental health service applicants. Each

 

community mental health services program and each licensed hospital

 

shall submit to the state office of recipient rights the names of,

 

and contact information for, applicants who have been denied mental

 

health service. For purposes of this subsection, an "applicant"

 

includes, but is not limited to, a legally competent adult who has

 


no guardian with authority to make medical decisions on his or her

 

behalf, a parent seeking service for his or her minor child, or a

 

guardian with authority to make medical decisions on behalf of his

 

or her ward.