Bill Text: GA HB231 | 2011-2012 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Mental Health Addictive Disease Community Recovery Act; enact
Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Democrat 4-2)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-02-15 - House Second Readers [HB231 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2011-HB231-Introduced.html
11 LC
37 1141
House
Bill 231
By:
Representatives Willard of the
49th,
Cooper of the
41st,
McKillip of the
115th,
Oliver of the
83rd,
Gardner of the
57th,
and others
A
BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
AN ACT
To
amend Title 37 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to mental
health, so as to provide community alternatives to institutionalized care for
treatment of mental illness; to provide for a short title; to provide for
community alternatives to hospitalization for treatment of alcoholics and drug
dependent persons; to provide a definition for community alternatives; to change
provisions relating to the emergency treatment of mental illness and alcoholic
and drug dependent individuals; to provide for related matters; to repeal
conflicting laws; and for other purposes.
BE
IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:
SECTION
1.
This
Act shall be known and may be cited as the "Mental Health Addictive Disease
Community Recovery Act."
SECTION
2.
Title
37 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to mental health, is
amended by adding a new Code section to read as follows:
"37-3-2.1.
The
primary purpose of this chapter shall be to provide community alternatives to
institutional care utilizing evidence based recovery model practices so that
persons with mental illness are afforded the opportunity to live, work, and
recover in their home
communities."
SECTION
3.
Said
title is further amended by adding a new Code section to read as
follows:
"37-3-2.2.
As
used in this chapter, the term 'community alternatives' means a comprehensive,
coordinated system of treatment options and supportive services which are likely
to assist the patient in recovery and in becoming a productive citizen. Such
treatment and services shall be founded upon evidence based, recovery model
practices which may include, but not be limited to, peer support, leisure
guidance, individual or group therapy, residential treatment programs,
psychiatric services and medication, coordinated health care, pharmaceutical
services, integrated supportive housing and supportive employment,
transportation, and other personal supports, such as mobility or other
technological supports, education, vocational rehabilitation, other
rehabilitative services available through the Medicaid Act, and other supportive
services in integrated community settings as may be defined through an
individualized recovery planning
process."
SECTION
4.
Said
title is further amended by revising subsections (a) and (b) of Code Section
37-3-41, relating to emergency admission for treatment of mental illness based
on a physician's certification or court order, as follows:
"37-3-41.
(a)
Any physician within this state may execute a certificate stating that he
or
she has personally examined a person
within the preceding 48 hours and found that, based upon observations set forth
in the certificate,
the
such
person appears to be a mentally ill person requiring involuntary treatment. A
physician's certificate shall expire seven days after it is executed. Any peace
officer, or
any contracted medical transport provider at the request of or in conjunction
with any peace officer, within 72 hours
after receiving such certificate, shall make diligent efforts to take into
custody the person named in the certificate and to deliver him
or
her forthwith to the nearest available
emergency receiving facility serving the county in which the patient is found,
or to the
nearest available emergency room or local mental health center where a willing
and qualified evaluator is available in person or accessible by video
conference, where he
or
she shall be received for
examination.
(b)
The appropriate court of the county in which a person may be found may issue an
order commanding any peace
officer, or
any contracted medical transport provider at the request of or in conjunction
with any peace officer, to take such
person into custody and deliver him
or
her forthwith for examination, either to
the nearest available emergency receiving facility serving the county in which
the patient is found,
or to the
nearest available emergency room or local mental health center where a willing
and qualified evaluator is available in person or accessible by video
conference, where such person shall be
received for examination, or to a physician who has agreed to examine such
patient and who will provide, where appropriate, a certificate pursuant to
subsection (a) of this Code section to permit delivery of such patient to an
emergency receiving facility pursuant to subsection (a) of this Code section.
Such order may only be issued if based either upon an unexpired physician's
certificate, as provided in subsection (a) of this Code section, or upon the
affidavits of at least two persons who attest that, within the preceding 48
hours, they have seen the person to be taken into custody and that, based upon
observations contained in their affidavit, they have reason to believe such
person is a mentally ill person requiring involuntary treatment. The court order
shall expire seven days after it is executed."
SECTION
5.
Said
title is further amended by revising subsection (a) of Code Section 37-3-42,
relating to emergency admission of mentally ill persons arrested for penal
offenses, as follows:
"(a)
A peace
officer, or
any contracted medical transport provider at the request of or in conjunction
with any peace officer, may take any
person to a physician within the county or an adjoining county for emergency
examination by the physician, as provided in Code Section 37-3-41,
or to the
nearest available emergency room or local mental health center where a willing
and qualified evaluator is available in person or accessible by video
conference, or directly to an emergency
receiving facility if (1) the person is committing a penal offense, and (2) the
peace officer has probable cause for believing that the person is a mentally ill
person requiring involuntary treatment. The peace officer need not formally
tender charges against the individual prior to taking the individual to a
physician or an emergency receiving facility under this Code section. The peace
officer shall execute a written report detailing the circumstances under which
the person was taken into custody; and this report shall be made a part of the
patient's clinical record."
SECTION
6.
Said
title is further amended by adding a new Code section to read as
follows:
"37-7-2.1.
The
primary purpose of this chapter shall be to provide community alternatives to
institutional care utilizing evidence based recovery model practices so that
persons with alcohol dependence or alcohol addiction are afforded the
opportunity to live, work, and recover in their home
communities."
SECTION
7.
Said
title is further amended by adding a new Code section to read as
follows:
"37-7-2.2.
As
used in this chapter, the term 'community alternatives' means a comprehensive,
coordinated system of treatment options and supportive services which are likely
to assist the patient in recovery and in becoming a productive citizen. Such
treatment and services shall be founded upon evidence based, recovery model
practices which may include, but not be limited to, peer support, leisure
guidance, individual or group therapy, residential treatment programs,
psychiatric services and medication, coordinated health care, pharmaceutical
services, integrated supportive housing and supportive employment,
transportation, and other personal supports such as mobility or other
technological supports, education, vocational rehabilitation, other
rehabilitative services available through the Medicaid Act, and other supportive
services in integrated community settings as may be defined through an
individualized recovery planning
process."
SECTION
8.
Said
title is further amended by revising subsections (a) and (b) of Code Section
37-7-41, relating to who may certify the need for emergency involuntary
treatment of alcoholics or drug dependent persons, as follows:
"(a)
Any physician within this state may execute a certificate stating that he
or
she has personally examined a person
within the preceding 48 hours and found that, based upon observations set forth
in the certificate, the person appears to be an alcoholic, a drug dependent
individual, or a drug abuser requiring involuntary treatment. A physician's
certificate shall expire seven days after it is executed. Any peace officer,
or any
contracted medical transport provider at the request of or in conjunction with
any peace officer, within 72 hours after
receiving such certificate, shall make diligent efforts to take into custody the
person named in the certificate and to deliver him forthwith to the nearest
available emergency receiving facility serving the county in which the patient
is found, or
to the nearest available emergency room or local mental health center where a
willing and qualified evaluator is available in person or accessible by video
conference, where he
or
she shall be received for
examination.
(b)
The appropriate court of the county in which a person may be found may issue an
order commanding any peace
officer, or
any contracted medical transport provider at the request of or in conjunction
with any peace officer, to take such
person into custody and deliver him
or
her forthwith for examination, either to
the nearest available emergency receiving facility serving the county in which
the patient is found,
or to the
nearest available emergency room or local mental health center where a willing
and qualified evaluator is available in person or accessible by video
conference, where such person shall be
received for examination, or to a physician who has agreed to examine such
patient and who will provide, where appropriate, a certificate pursuant to
subsection (a) of this Code section to permit delivery of such patient to an
emergency receiving facility pursuant to subsection (a) of this Code section.
Such order may only be issued if based either upon an unexpired physician's
certificate, as provided in subsection (a) of this Code section, or upon the
affidavits of at least two persons who attest that, within the preceding 48
hours, they have seen the person to be taken into custody and that, based upon
observations contained in their affidavit, they have reason to believe such
person is an alcoholic, a drug dependent individual, or a drug abuser requiring
involuntary treatment. The court order shall expire seven days after it is
executed."
SECTION
9.
Said
title is further amended by revising subsection (a) of Code Section 37-7-42,
relating to emergency admission of alcoholic or drug dependent persons arrested
for penal offenses, as follows:
" (a)
A peace
officer, or
any contracted medical transport provider at the request of or in conjunction
with any peace officer, may take any
person to a physician within the county or an adjoining county for emergency
examination by the physician, as provided in Code Section 37-7-41,
or to the
nearest available emergency room or local mental health center where a willing
and qualified evaluator is available in person or accessible by video
conference, or directly to an emergency
receiving facility if the person is committing a penal offense and the peace
officer has probable cause for believing that the person is an alcoholic, a drug
dependent individual, or a drug abuser requiring involuntary treatment. The
peace officer need not formally tender charges against the individual prior to
taking the individual to a physician or an emergency receiving facility under
this Code section. The peace officer shall execute a written report detailing
the circumstances under which the person was taken into custody; and this report
shall be made a part of the patient's clinical record."
SECTION
10.
All
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.