Florida Senate - 2015                                    SB 1340
       
       
        
       By Senator Latvala
       
       
       
       
       
       20-00160-15                                           20151340__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to mental health and substance abuse;
    3         amending s. 394.4598, F.S.; authorizing a family
    4         member of a patient or an interested party to petition
    5         a court for the appointment of a guardian advocate;
    6         requiring a court to give preference to certain
    7         specified surrogates if such surrogate has already
    8         been designated by the patient; creating s. 397.803,
    9         F.S.; establishing the Substance Abuse Assistance
   10         Pilot Program within the Department of Children and
   11         Families; requiring the department to determine a
   12         target number of participants within available funds;
   13         providing the purpose of the pilot program; requiring
   14         the program to develop safe and cost efficient
   15         treatment alternatives and provide comprehensive case
   16         management services for eligible substance abuse
   17         impaired adults; authorizing participation in the
   18         program as an alternative to criminal imprisonment;
   19         requiring that each pilot program submit specified
   20         data to the department on a monthly basis; providing
   21         eligibility criteria; requiring that maximum
   22         enrollment be determined on the basis of available
   23         funding; requiring the department to contract with
   24         specified entities to serve as program managers;
   25         specifying the functions of the program manager;
   26         requiring the department to establish certain criteria
   27         and qualifications for the project manager; requiring
   28         a pilot program site to only have one network in the
   29         region; providing requirements for provider networks;
   30         specifying services that must be provided by a
   31         provider network; specifying that the primary payor
   32         for services provided through the program is the
   33         participant’s private pay or Medicaid insurance
   34         coverage; allowing eligible participants to share in
   35         the cost of provided services based on ability to pay;
   36         requiring the department to provide an annual report
   37         to the Governor and Legislature evaluating the impact
   38         of the program; requiring such report to include
   39         specified information; transferring and renumbering s.
   40         765.401, F.S.; transferring and renumbering s.
   41         765.404, F.S.; providing a directive to the Division
   42         of Law Revision and Information; creating s. 765.4015,
   43         F.S.; providing a short title; creating s. 765.402,
   44         F.S.; providing legislative findings; creating s.
   45         765.403, F.S.; defining terms; creating s. 765.405,
   46         F.S.; authorizing an adult with capacity to execute a
   47         mental health or substance abuse treatment advance
   48         directive; providing a presumption of validity if
   49         certain requirements are met; providing for execution
   50         of the mental health or substance abuse treatment
   51         advanced directive; creating s. 765.406, F.S.;
   52         establishing requirements for a valid mental health or
   53         substance abuse treatment advance directive; providing
   54         that a mental health or substance abuse treatment
   55         directive is valid upon execution even if a part of
   56         the mental health or substance abuse treatment
   57         directive takes effect at a later date; allowing a
   58         mental health or substance abuse treatment directive
   59         to be revoked, in whole or in part, or to expire under
   60         its own terms; specifying that a mental health or
   61         substance abuse treatment advance directive does not
   62         or may not serve specified purposes; creating s.
   63         765.407, F.S.; providing circumstances under which a
   64         mental health or substance abuse treatment advance
   65         directive may be revoked; providing circumstances
   66         under which a principal may waive specific directive
   67         provisions without revoking the directive; creating s.
   68         765.408, F.S.; providing legislative findings and
   69         legislative intent for self-binding arrangements;
   70         providing requirements for creating such arrangements;
   71         creating s. 765.409, F.S.; specifying the conditions
   72         under which a principal may be admitted for inpatient
   73         mental health or substance abuse treatment; providing
   74         that creation of an irrevocable directive of consent
   75         to inpatient treatment creates a rebuttable
   76         presumption of incapacity; authorizing a principal to
   77         be admitted to, or remain in, inpatient treatment for
   78         up to 14 days; requiring express consent in a
   79         directive for the administration of psychotropic
   80         medication; requiring conditions for administering
   81         such medication; prohibiting a principal from
   82         authorizing psychosurgery or electroconvulsive therapy
   83         in a directive; authorizing a principal to seek
   84         specified injunctive relief; creating s. 765.410,
   85         F.S.; prohibiting criminal prosecution of a health
   86         care facility, provider, or surrogate who acts
   87         pursuant to a mental health or substance abuse
   88         treatment decision; creating s. 765.411, F.S.;
   89         providing for recognition of a mental health and
   90         substance abuse treatment advanced directive executed
   91         in another state if it complies with the laws of this
   92         state; amending ss. 395.0197, 395.1051, 456.0575,
   93         765.101, and 765.104, F.S.; conforming cross
   94         references; reenacting ss. 394.459(3)(b), 394.4598(6)
   95         and (7), 394.4655(6)(d) and (7)(f), 394.467(6)(d),
   96         394.46715, and 765.202(5), F.S., to incorporate the
   97         amendment made to s. 394.4598, F.S., in references
   98         thereto; providing an effective date.
   99          
  100  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  101  
  102         Section 1. Subsections (1) and (5) of section 394.4598,
  103  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
  104         394.4598 Guardian advocate.—
  105         (1) The administrator, a family member of the patient, or
  106  an interested party, may petition the court for the appointment
  107  of a guardian advocate based upon the opinion of a psychiatrist
  108  that the patient is incompetent to consent to treatment. If the
  109  court finds that a patient is incompetent to consent to
  110  treatment and has not been adjudicated incapacitated and a
  111  guardian with the authority to consent to mental health
  112  treatment appointed, it shall appoint a guardian advocate. The
  113  patient has the right to have an attorney represent him or her
  114  at the hearing. If the person is indigent, the court shall
  115  appoint the office of the public defender to represent him or
  116  her at the hearing. The patient has the right to testify, cross
  117  examine witnesses, and present witnesses. The proceeding shall
  118  be recorded either electronically or stenographically, and
  119  testimony shall be provided under oath. One of the professionals
  120  authorized to give an opinion in support of a petition for
  121  involuntary placement, as described in s. 394.4655 or s.
  122  394.467, must testify. A guardian advocate must meet the
  123  qualifications of a guardian contained in part IV of chapter
  124  744, except that a professional referred to in this part, an
  125  employee of the facility providing direct services to the
  126  patient under this part, a departmental employee, a facility
  127  administrator, or member of the Florida local advocacy council
  128  shall not be appointed. A person who is appointed as a guardian
  129  advocate must agree to the appointment.
  130         (5) In selecting a guardian advocate, the court shall give
  131  preference to a health care, mental health care, or substance
  132  abuse treatment surrogate, if one has already been designated by
  133  the patient. If the patient has not previously selected a health
  134  care, mental health care, or substance abuse treatment
  135  surrogate, except for good cause documented in the court record,
  136  the selection shall be made from the following list in the order
  137  of listing:
  138         (a) The patient’s spouse.
  139         (b) An adult child of the patient.
  140         (c) A parent of the patient.
  141         (d) The adult next of kin of the patient.
  142         (e) An adult friend of the patient.
  143         (f) An adult trained and willing to serve as guardian
  144  advocate for the patient.
  145         Section 2. Section 397.803, Florida Statutes, is created to
  146  read:
  147         397.803Substance Abuse Assistance Pilot Program.
  148         (1) PILOT PROGRAM.—
  149         (a)There is created within the Department of Children and
  150  Families the Substance Abuse Assistance Pilot Program in such
  151  regions of the state as may be designated in the general
  152  appropriations act.
  153         (b)Within available funding, the department shall
  154  determine a target number of participants in each pilot program
  155  region.
  156         (c)The pilot program is created to determine whether the
  157  provision of comprehensive care through a coordinated system of
  158  case management that offers a range of recovery support services
  159  during and after treatment for acute episodes leads to increased
  160  employment, stability in housing, and decreased involvement in
  161  the criminal justice system on the part of participants.
  162         (d)The pilot program shall provide a comprehensive
  163  continuum of high-quality and accessible substance abuse
  164  intervention, residential and outpatient treatment,
  165  comprehensive case management, and recovery support services for
  166  substance abuse impaired adults.
  167         (e) The pilot program in each selected region shall develop
  168  safe and cost efficient treatment alternatives and provide
  169  comprehensive case management and continuum of care services for
  170  eligible substance abuse impaired adults.
  171         (f) Participation in the pilot program may be designated as
  172  an alternative to criminal imprisonment for substance abuse
  173  impaired adults, as appropriate.
  174         (g) Each pilot program region shall submit data to the
  175  department on a monthly basis that, at a minimum, reports
  176  characteristics of the participants, use of services, and such
  177  data as necessary to measure changes in participants’ status
  178  with regard to housing, employment, and criminal activity.
  179         (2) ELIGIBILITY AND ENROLLMENT.
  180         (a) To be eligible for participation in the pilot program,
  181  a person must:
  182         1. Be 18 years of age or older with a history of chronic
  183  substance abuse or addiction.
  184         2. Execute a mental health or substance abuse treatment
  185  directive as defined in s. 765.403. The directive must include a
  186  self-binding arrangement as specified in s. 765.408. In the
  187  event that an eligible participant does not have a family member
  188  or other adult available to serve as a surrogate as defined in
  189  s. 765.403, the entity under contract with the Statewide Public
  190  Guardianship Office in that region shall be appointed to serve
  191  as the surrogate.
  192         3. Eligible participants shall share responsibility for the
  193  costs of pilot program services according to their ability to
  194  pay, based on a sliding fee scale.
  195         (b)Maximum enrollment shall be determined by the
  196  department, based on available funding.
  197         (3) SYSTEM OF CARE; CASE MANAGEMENT; PAYMENT METHOD.
  198         (a) The department shall contract with the Medicaid managed
  199  care organization or behavioral health managing entity operating
  200  in the applicable geographic region to serve as program manager.
  201         (b) The program manager is responsible for the following
  202  functions:
  203         1.Network management including recruitment and retention
  204  of an adequate number of qualified service providers to ensure
  205  accessibility and quality of care;
  206         2.Coordination of care, including the development and
  207  implementation of organizational structures and operational
  208  policies necessary to ensure that the network provides
  209  continuity of care and avoids unnecessary duplication of
  210  services;
  211         3.Comprehensive case management, which may be provided by
  212  the program manager or by a contracted service provider,
  213  including direct interaction with participants and other
  214  activities necessary to assess, plan, implement, and monitor the
  215  needed services; and
  216         4. Administrative functions for the network including, but
  217  not limited to, data management, financial management, and
  218  contract compliance.
  219         (c)The department shall establish criteria for ensuring
  220  that an adequate number of providers are included in the network
  221  and for provider qualifications, which shall be specified in the
  222  contract with the program manager. The pilot program shall be
  223  limited to one network in the region for the duration of the
  224  pilot program. The provider network shall:
  225         1. Offer a comprehensive range of services for substance
  226  abuse impaired or drug addicted adults.
  227         2. Enter into agreements with law enforcement agencies and
  228  the criminal justice system to divert nonviolent offenders with
  229  histories of serious substance abuse or chronic addiction into
  230  intensive treatment, comprehensive case management, and
  231  rehabilitation services.
  232         3. Enter into an agreement with the appropriate
  233  neighborhood housing services program to provide housing
  234  assistance to eligible participants.
  235         4. Enter into an agreement with the entity under contract
  236  with the Statewide Public Guardianship Office in the pilot
  237  program region to provide guardians to act in the capacity of
  238  surrogates for eligible participants who do not have family
  239  members or other adults available to perform such duties.
  240         5. Enter into an agreement with the applicable nonprofit
  241  local legal services organization serving the pilot program
  242  region to provide legal assistance to eligible participants.
  243         (4) SERVICES.The network must be capable of providing, at
  244  a minimum, the following services to substance abuse impaired or
  245  drug addicted adults:
  246         1. Comprehensive case management and continuum of care
  247  coordination;
  248         2. Outpatient treatment services;
  249         3. Crisis care, including mobile response, and
  250  detoxification in short-term residential facilities;
  251         4. Inpatient treatment services;
  252         5. Step-down residential treatment services;
  253         6. Housing needs assessment and assistance;
  254         7. Employment assistance programs;
  255         8. Transportation needs assessment and assistance; and
  256         9. Legal services.
  257         (5) PAYMENT FOR SERVICES.
  258         (a) The general revenue funds appropriated by the
  259  legislature for the purposes of this section shall be applied to
  260  payment for services only after an eligible participant’s
  261  private pay or Medicaid insurance coverage has been exhausted.
  262         (b) An eligible participant may share in the cost of
  263  provided services based on his or her ability to pay.
  264         (6) ACCOUNTABILITY; ANNUAL REPORTS.
  265         (a) By October 1 of each year, the department shall provide
  266  a written report to the Governor, the President of the Senate,
  267  and the Speaker of the House of Representatives which describes
  268  the operation and effectiveness of the pilot program. The report
  269  must include, but is not limited to, an evaluation of the impact
  270  of the following components of the program:
  271         1.Comprehensive case management;
  272         2.Care coordination and followup care;
  273         3.Housing initiatives; and
  274         4.Employment assistance.
  275         (b) The report must include a recommendation regarding the
  276  continuation, expansion, or termination of the pilot program.
  277         Section 3. Section 765.401, Florida Statutes, is
  278  transferred and renumbered as section 765.311, Florida Statutes.
  279         Section 4. Section 765.404, Florida Statutes, is
  280  transferred and renumbered as section 765.312, Florida Statutes.
  281         Section 5. The Division of Law Revision and Information is
  282  directed to rename part IV of chapter 765, Florida Statutes, as
  283  “Mental Health and Substance Abuse Advance Directives.”
  284         Section 6. Section 765.4015 is created to read:
  285         765.4015 Short title.—Sections 765.402-765.411 may be cited
  286  as the “Jennifer Act.”
  287         Section 7. Section 765.402, Florida Statutes, is created to
  288  read:
  289         765.402Legislative findings.
  290         (1) The Legislature recognizes that an individual with
  291  capacity has the ability to control decisions relating to his or
  292  her own mental health care or substance abuse treatment. The
  293  Legislature finds that:
  294         (a) Substance abuse and some mental illnesses cause
  295  individuals to fluctuate between capacity and incapacity;
  296         (b) During periods when an individual’s capacity is
  297  unclear, the individual may be unable to provide informed
  298  consent necessary to access needed treatment;
  299         (c) Early treatment may prevent an individual from becoming
  300  so ill that involuntary treatment is necessary; and
  301         (d) Individuals with substance abuse impairment or mental
  302  illness need an established procedure to express their
  303  instructions and preferences for treatment and provide advance
  304  consent to or refusal of treatment. This procedure should be
  305  less expensive and less restrictive than guardianship.
  306         (2) The Legislature further recognizes that:
  307         (a) A mental health or substance abuse treatment advance
  308  directive must provide the individual with a full range of
  309  choices.
  310         (b) For a mental health or substance abuse directive to be
  311  an effective tool, individuals must be able to choose how they
  312  want their directives to be applied, including the right of
  313  revocation, during periods of incapacity.
  314         (c) There must be a clear process so that treatment
  315  providers can abide by an individual’s treatment choices.
  316         Section 8. Section 765.403, Florida Statutes, is created to
  317  read:
  318         765.403 Definitions.As used in this section, the term:
  319         (1) “Adult” means any individual who has attained the age
  320  of majority or is an emancipated minor.
  321         (2) “Capacity” means that an adult has not been found to be
  322  incapacitated pursuant to s. 394.463.
  323         (3) “Health care facility” means a hospital, nursing home,
  324  hospice, home health agency, or health maintenance organization
  325  licensed in this state, or any facility subject to part I of
  326  chapter 394.
  327         (4) “Incapacity” or “incompetent” means an adult who is:
  328         (a)Unable to understand the nature, character, and
  329  anticipated results of proposed treatment or alternatives or the
  330  recognized serious possible risks, complications, and
  331  anticipated benefits of treatments and alternatives, including
  332  nontreatment;
  333         (b)Physically or mentally unable to communicate a willful
  334  and knowing decision about mental health care or substance abuse
  335  treatment;
  336         (c)Unable to communicate his or her understanding or
  337  treatment decisions; or
  338         (d)Determined incompetent pursuant to s. 394.463.
  339         (5) “Informed consent” means consent voluntarily given by a
  340  person after a sufficient explanation and disclosure of the
  341  subject matter involved to enable that person to have a general
  342  understanding of the treatment or procedure and the medically
  343  acceptable alternatives, including the substantial risks and
  344  hazards inherent in the proposed treatment or procedures or
  345  nontreatment, and to make knowing mental health care or
  346  substance abuse treatment decisions without coercion or undue
  347  influence.
  348         (6) “Mental health or substance abuse treatment advance
  349  directive” means a written document in which the principal makes
  350  a declaration of instructions or preferences or appoints a
  351  surrogate to make decisions on behalf of the principal regarding
  352  the principal’s mental health or substance abuse treatment, or
  353  both.
  354         (7) “Mental health professional” means a psychiatrist,
  355  psychologist, psychiatric nurse, or social worker, and such
  356  other mental health professionals licensed pursuant to chapter
  357  458, chapter 464, chapter 490, or chapter 491.
  358         (8) “Principal” means a competent adult who executes a
  359  mental health or substance abuse treatment directive and on
  360  whose behalf mental health care or substance abuse treatment
  361  decisions are to be made.
  362         (9) “Self-binding arrangement” means an affirmative
  363  statement, also known as a Ulysses Arrangement, contained within
  364  a mental health or substance abuse treatment directive, executed
  365  voluntarily by the principal, which allows the principal to form
  366  self-binding arrangements for mental health or substance abuse
  367  treatment as a means of ensuring early intervention and to avoid
  368  involuntary commitment. The inclusion of a self-binding
  369  arrangement is limited to directives executed by participants in
  370  a substance abuse assistance pilot program created pursuant to
  371  s. 397.803.
  372         (10) “Surrogate” means any competent adult expressly
  373  designated by a principal to make mental health care or
  374  substance abuse treatment decisions on behalf of the principal
  375  as set forth in the principal’s mental health or substance abuse
  376  treatment advance directive or self-binding arrangement as those
  377  terms are defined in this section.
  378  
  379         Section 9. Section 765.405, Florida Statutes, is created to
  380  read:
  381         765.405 Mental health or substance abuse treatment advance
  382  directive; execution; allowable provisions.
  383         (1) An adult with capacity may execute a mental health or
  384  substance abuse treatment advance directive.
  385         (2) A directive executed in accordance with this section is
  386  presumed to be valid. The inability to honor one or more
  387  provisions of a directive does not affect the validity of the
  388  remaining provisions.
  389         (3) A directive may include any provision relating to
  390  mental health or substance abuse treatment or the care of the
  391  principal or the principal’s personal affairs. Without
  392  limitation, a directive may include:
  393         (a) The principal’s preferences and instructions for mental
  394  health or substance abuse treatment.
  395         (b) Consent to specific types of mental health or substance
  396  abuse treatment.
  397         (c) Refusal to consent to specific types of mental health
  398  or substance abuse treatment.
  399         (d) Consent to admission to and retention in a facility for
  400  mental health or substance abuse treatment for up to 14 days.
  401  Such consent must be an affirmative statement contained within
  402  the directive and must clearly indicate whether such consent is
  403  revocable by the principal during a mental health or substance
  404  abuse crisis.
  405         (e) Descriptions of situations that may cause the principal
  406  to experience a mental health or substance abuse crisis.
  407         (f) Suggested alternative responses that may supplement or
  408  be in lieu of direct mental health or substance abuse treatment,
  409  such as treatment approaches from other providers.
  410         (g) Appointment of a surrogate to make mental health or
  411  substance abuse treatment decisions on the principal’s behalf.
  412  In the event the directive includes a self-binding arrangement
  413  allowing the surrogate authority to consent on the principal’s
  414  behalf to voluntary admission to inpatient mental health or
  415  substance abuse treatment, such authority must be clearly stated
  416  in the directive.
  417         (h) The principal’s nomination of a guardian, limited
  418  guardian, or guardian advocate as provided chapter 744.
  419         (4) A directive may be combined with or be independent of a
  420  nomination of a guardian or other durable power of attorney.
  421         Section 10. Section 765.406, Florida Statutes, is created
  422  to read:
  423         765.406 Execution of a mental health or substance abuse
  424  advanced directive; effective date; expiration.
  425         (1) A directive must:
  426         (a) Be in writing.
  427         (b) Contain language that clearly indicates that the
  428  principal intends to create a directive.
  429         (c) Contain language that clearly indicates whether the
  430  principal intends for the surrogate to have the authority to
  431  provide consent on the principal’s behalf to voluntary admission
  432  to inpatient mental health or substance abuse treatment and
  433  whether the principal’s consent is revocable.
  434         (d) Be dated and signed by the principal or, if the
  435  principal is unable to sign, at the principal’s direction in the
  436  principal’s presence.
  437         (e) Be witnessed by two adults, each of whom must declare
  438  that he or she personally knows the principal and was present
  439  when the principal dated and signed the directive, and that the
  440  principal did not appear to be incapacitated or acting under
  441  fraud, undue influence, or duress. The person designated as the
  442  surrogate may not act as a witness to the execution of the
  443  document designating the mental health or substance abuse care
  444  treatment surrogate. At least one person who acts as a witness
  445  must be neither the principal’s spouse nor his or her blood
  446  relative.
  447         (2) A directive is valid upon execution, but all or part of
  448  the directive may take effect at a later date as designated by
  449  the principal in the directive.
  450         (3) A directive may:
  451         (a) Be revoked, in whole or in part, pursuant to s.
  452  765.407; or
  453         (b) Expire under its own terms.
  454         (4) A directive does not or may not:
  455         (a) Create an entitlement to mental health, substance
  456  abuse, or medical treatment or supersede a determination of
  457  medical necessity.
  458         (b) Obligate any health care provider, professional person,
  459  or health care facility to pay the costs associated with the
  460  treatment requested.
  461         (c) Obligate a health care provider, professional person,
  462  or health care facility to be responsible for the nontreatment
  463  or personal care of the principal or the principal’s personal
  464  affairs outside the scope of services the facility normally
  465  provides.
  466         (d) Replace or supersede any will or testamentary document
  467  or supersede the provision of intestate succession.
  468         (e) Be revoked by an incapacitated principal unless that
  469  principal selected the option to permit revocation while
  470  incapacitated at the time his or her directive was executed.
  471         (f) Be used as the authority for inpatient admission for
  472  more than 14 days.
  473         Section 11. Section 765.407, Florida Statutes, is created
  474  to read:
  475         765.407 Revocation; waiver.
  476         (1)(a) A principal with capacity may, by written statement
  477  of the principal or at the principal’s direction in the
  478  principal’s presence, revoke a directive in whole or in part.
  479         (b) An incapacitated principal may revoke a directive only
  480  if he or she elected at the time of executing the directive to
  481  be able to revoke when incapacitated.
  482         (2) The principal shall provide a copy of his or her
  483  written statement of revocation to his or her agent, if any, and
  484  to each health care provider, professional person, or health
  485  care facility that received a copy of the directive from the
  486  principal.
  487         (3) The written statement of revocation is effective as to
  488  a health care provider, professional person, or health care
  489  facility upon receipt. The professional person, health care
  490  provider, or health care facility, or persons acting under their
  491  direction, shall make the statement of revocation part of the
  492  principal’s medical record.
  493         (4) A directive also may:
  494         (a) Be revoked, in whole or in part, expressly or to the
  495  extent of any inconsistency, by a subsequent directive; or
  496         (b) Be superseded or revoked by a court order, including
  497  any order entered in a criminal matter. A directive may be
  498  superseded by a court order regardless of whether the order
  499  contains an explicit reference to the directive. A directive may
  500  not be interpreted in a manner that interferes with:
  501         1. Incarceration or detention by the Department of
  502  Corrections or in a municipal or county jail; or
  503         2. Treatment of a principal who is a subject to involuntary
  504  treatment pursuant to chapter 394.
  505         (5) A directive that would have otherwise expired but is
  506  effective because the principal is incapacitated remains
  507  effective until the principal is no longer incapacitated unless
  508  the principal elected to be able to revoke while incapacitated
  509  and has revoked the directive.
  510         (6) When a principal with capacity consents to treatment
  511  that differs from, or refuses treatment consented to in, his or
  512  her directive, the consent or refusal constitutes a waiver of a
  513  particular provision and does not constitute a revocation of the
  514  provision or the directive unless that principal also revokes
  515  the provision or directive.
  516         Section 12. Section 765.408, Florida Statutes, is created
  517  to read:
  518         765.408 Self-binding arrangements.
  519         (1) The Legislature finds that each competent adult has the
  520  fundamental right of self-determination regarding decisions
  521  pertaining to his or her own mental health care or substance
  522  abuse treatment decisions.
  523         (2) The Legislature further finds that the facilitation of
  524  advance planning helps:
  525         (a) Prevent unnecessary involuntary commitment and
  526  incarceration;
  527         (b) Improve patient safety and health; and
  528         (c) Improve care and enable patients to exercise control
  529  over their treatment.
  530         (3) To ensure such right is not lost or diminished, the
  531  Legislature intends that a procedure be established to allow a
  532  person to plan for episodes that compromise his or her ability
  533  to recognize his or her need for treatment before meeting
  534  involuntary commitment criteria. The principal must include a
  535  specific provision in his or her mental health and substance
  536  abuse advance directive authorizing the surrogate to direct the
  537  course of his or her mental health or substance abuse treatment.
  538         (4) A principal has a right to form a self-binding
  539  arrangement for care, which allows the principal to obtain
  540  treatment in the event that an acute episode renders him or her
  541  unable to provide consent to or induces the principal to refuse
  542  treatment. Such arrangement must be affirmatively stated in the
  543  directive and include whether the principal has the right of
  544  revocation during an acute episode.
  545         (5) To create an arrangement under this section, the
  546  principal must obtain a written, signed attestation of capacity
  547  from a health care professional, mental health care provider, or
  548  health care facility.
  549         (6) A self-binding arrangement must:
  550         (a) Be in writing.
  551         (b) Be dated and signed by the principal or the principal’s
  552  designated representative if the principal is unable to sign.
  553         (c) State whether the principal wishes to be able to revoke
  554  the directive at any time or whether directive remains
  555  irrevocable when the principal is unable to consent to treatment
  556  or is incapacitated. Failure to clarify whether the directive is
  557  revocable does not render it unenforceable. If the directive
  558  fails to state whether it is revocable, the principal may revoke
  559  it at any time.
  560         (d) Contain a clear affirmation that the principal is aware
  561  of the nature of the document signed and that the directive was
  562  signed freely and voluntarily.
  563         (e) Be witnessed by at least two adults. A witness may not
  564  be:
  565         1. A member of the principal’s treatment team;
  566         2. Related to the principal by blood, adoption, or
  567  marriage;
  568         3. Be in a romantic or dating relationship with the
  569  principal;
  570         4. The surrogate named by the principal in the signed
  571  directive; or
  572         5. The owner, operator, or employee of, or a relative of
  573  the owner or operator of, a treatment facility in which the
  574  principal is a patient.
  575         (f) Be witnessed by persons who attest that:
  576         1. They were present when the principal signed the
  577  directive;
  578         2. The principal did not appear incapacitated or under
  579  undue influence or duress when the principal signed the
  580  directive; and
  581         3. The principal presented identification or the witness
  582  personally knows the principal.
  583         (g) If it contains a provision that the directive is
  584  irrevocable, contain a written, signed attestation from a mental
  585  health professional that the principal had capacity at the time
  586  the directive was executed. If the principal is free to revoke
  587  the directive at any time, such attestation is not required.
  588         (h) Be valid upon execution.
  589         (i) Contain a designated activation standard other than the
  590  principal’s inability to provide consent or incapacity by
  591  describing the circumstances under which the directive becomes
  592  active.
  593         (j) Affirmatively state that despite activation, a
  594  directive does not prevail over contemporaneous preferences
  595  expressed by a principal who has the ability to consent to
  596  treatment or capacity and has not included a self-binding
  597  arrangement provision in the directive.
  598         (k) Appoint a surrogate to make all health care and
  599  substance abuse treatment decisions for the principal, including
  600  decisions to consent on behalf of the principal to inpatient
  601  mental health or substance abuse treatment.
  602         (l) Contain a provision that decisions made by a surrogate
  603  for a principal’s mental health care or substance abuse
  604  treatment are effective without judicial approval.
  605         Section 13. Section 765.409, Florida Statutes, is created
  606  to read:
  607         765.409 Admission to inpatient treatment; effect of
  608  directive.
  609         (1) A principal may be admitted for inpatient mental health
  610  or substance abuse treatment only if he or she:
  611         (a) Chose not to be able to revoke his or her directive
  612  during any period of inability to provide consent or incapacity;
  613         (b) Consented to voluntary admission to inpatient mental
  614  health or substance abuse treatment, or authorized a surrogate
  615  to consent on the principal’s behalf;
  616         (c) At the time of admission to inpatient treatment,
  617  refuses to be admitted; and
  618         (d) The principal created an irrevocable directive that
  619  consents to treatment and which the principal is refusing under
  620  the influence of a mental health or substance abuse crisis.
  621         (2) The creation of an irrevocable directive of consent to
  622  inpatient treatment creates a rebuttable presumption of
  623  incapacity.
  624         (3)(a) The principal may only be admitted to, or remain in,
  625  inpatient treatment for a period of up to 14 days.
  626         (b) The principal’s directive must contain express consent
  627  to the administration of psychotropic medication in
  628  contravention of illness-induced objections. Such medication may
  629  be administered by licensed psychiatrists and only if two
  630  psychiatrists recommend, in writing, the specific medication.
  631         (c) The principal is prohibited from authorizing
  632  psychosurgery or electroconvulsive therapy in his or her
  633  directive.
  634         (d) The principal may seek injunctive relief for release
  635  from the inpatient facility.
  636         Section 14. Section 765.410, Florida Statutes, is created
  637  to read:
  638         765.410 Immunity from liability; weight of proof;
  639  presumption.—
  640         (1) A health care facility, provider, or other person who
  641  acts under the direction of a health care facility or provider
  642  is not subject to criminal prosecution or civil liability, and
  643  may not be deemed to have engaged in unprofessional conduct, as
  644  a result of carrying out a mental health care or substance abuse
  645  treatment decision made in accordance with this section. The
  646  surrogate who makes a mental health care or substance abuse
  647  treatment decision on a principal’s behalf, pursuant to this
  648  section, is not subject to criminal prosecution or civil
  649  liability for such action.
  650         (2) This section applies unless it is shown by a
  651  preponderance of the evidence that the person authorizing or
  652  effectuating a mental health or substance abuse treatment
  653  decision did not, in good faith, comply with this section.
  654         Section 15. Section 765.411, Florida Statutes, is created
  655  to read:
  656         765.411Recognition of mental health and substance abuse
  657  treatment advance directive executed in another state.—A mental
  658  health or substance abuse treatment advance directive executed
  659  in another state in compliance with the law of that state is
  660  validly executed for the purposes of this chapter.
  661         Section 16. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section
  662  395.0197, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
  663         395.0197 Internal risk management program.—
  664         (1) Every licensed facility shall, as a part of its
  665  administrative functions, establish an internal risk management
  666  program that includes all of the following components:
  667         (d) A system for informing a patient or an individual
  668  identified pursuant to s. 765.311(1) 765.401(1) that the patient
  669  was the subject of an adverse incident, as defined in subsection
  670  (5). Such notice shall be given by an appropriately trained
  671  person designated by the licensed facility as soon as
  672  practicable to allow the patient an opportunity to minimize
  673  damage or injury.
  674         Section 17. Section 395.1051, Florida Statutes, is amended
  675  to read:
  676         395.1051 Duty to notify patients.—An appropriately trained
  677  person designated by each licensed facility shall inform each
  678  patient, or an individual identified pursuant to s. 765.311(1)
  679  765.401(1), in person about adverse incidents that result in
  680  serious harm to the patient. Notification of outcomes of care
  681  that result in harm to the patient under this section shall not
  682  constitute an acknowledgment or admission of liability, nor can
  683  it be introduced as evidence.
  684         Section 18. Section 456.0575, Florida Statutes, is amended
  685  to read:
  686         456.0575 Duty to notify patients.—Every licensed health
  687  care practitioner shall inform each patient, or an individual
  688  identified pursuant to s. 765.311(1) 765.401(1), in person about
  689  adverse incidents that result in serious harm to the patient.
  690  Notification of outcomes of care that result in harm to the
  691  patient under this section shall not constitute an
  692  acknowledgment of admission of liability, nor can such
  693  notifications be introduced as evidence.
  694         Section 19. Subsection (15) of section 765.101, Florida
  695  Statutes, is amended to read:
  696         765.101 Definitions.—As used in this chapter:
  697         (15) “Proxy” means a competent adult who has not been
  698  expressly designated to make health care decisions for a
  699  particular incapacitated individual, but who, nevertheless, is
  700  authorized pursuant to s. 765.311 765.401 to make health care
  701  decisions for such individual.
  702         Section 20. Subsection (4) of section 765.104, Florida
  703  Statutes, is amended to read:
  704         765.104 Amendment or revocation.—
  705         (4) Any patient for whom a medical proxy has been
  706  recognized under s. 765.311 765.401 and for whom any previous
  707  legal disability that precluded the patient’s ability to consent
  708  is removed may amend or revoke the recognition of the medical
  709  proxy and any uncompleted decision made by that proxy. The
  710  amendment or revocation takes effect when it is communicated to
  711  the proxy, the health care provider, or the health care facility
  712  in writing or, if communicated orally, in the presence of a
  713  third person.
  714         Section 21. Paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of s. 394.459,
  715  subsections (6) and (7) of s. 394.4598, paragraph (d) of
  716  subsection (6) and paragraph (f) of subsection (7) of s.
  717  394.4655, paragraph (d) of subsection (6) of s. 394.467, s.
  718  394.46715, and subsection (5) of s. 765.202, Florida Statutes,
  719  are reenacted for the purpose of incorporating the amendments
  720  made to s. 394.4598, Florida Statutes.
  721         Section 22. This act shall take effect July 1, 2015.