SPONSOR: |
Rep. Barbieri & Sen. Hall-Long |
|
Reps.
Baumbach, Heffernan, Jaques, Keeley, Lynn, Matthews, Miro; Sens. Peterson,
Townsend |
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 148th GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
HOUSE BILL NO. 64 |
AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 16 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO DELAWARE MEDICAL ORDERS FOR SCOPE OF TREATMENT ACT. |
Section 1. Amend Title 16 of the Delaware Code by making deletions as shown by strike through and insertions as shown by underline as follows:
CHAPTER 25A DELAWARE MEDICAL ORDERS FOR SCOPE
OF TREATMENT ACT
§ 2501A. Short title.
This Chapter shall be known and may be cited
as the “Delaware Medical Orders for Scope of Treatment Act” (“DMOST Act”).
§ 2502A. Statement of purpose.
(a) An adult individual who has
decision-making capacity has the right to refuse medical or surgical treatment
in order to allow natural death if
such refusal is not contrary to existing public health laws.
(b) An adult individual with decision-making
capacity has the right to plan ahead for health-care decisions through an advance
health-care directive pursuant to Chapter 25 of this title, or through a DMOST form pursuant to this chapter or both, and to
have the wishes expressed in those documents respected, subject to certain
limitations, in order to ensure that the right to control decisions about one’s
own health care is not lost if a patient loses decision-making capacity and is
not able to participate actively in making his or her own decisions, either
temporarily or permanently.
(c) An advance health-care directive is recommended
for every adult whether or not the individual anticipates a period of
incapacity.
(d) The DMOST form is separate from and is
not an advance health-care directive. It
expresses an individual’s wishes regarding scope
of treatment through medical orders. The DMOST form does not require an advance health-care directive.
(e) Data reveal that many individuals may
reside or be situated in multiple locations such
as home, acute care, and post-acute care settings near the end of life. Changes in such settings require that an
easily understood, standardized, portable document be available to communicate
the individual’s care preferences. A DMOST form provides such a document.
§ 2503A. Definitions.
(a)
"Advance health-care directive" means an advance health-care
directive under Chapter 25 of this title, a durable power of attorney for
health-care decisions, or any individual instruction or power of attorney for
health care valid in the state where such document was executed or where the
individual executing such document was a resident at the time that such
document was executed that appoints an agent. Said document must have been
executed by the individual authorizing the appointed agent to make decisions
about the individual's health care when such individual no longer has
decision-making capacity.
(b)
“Decision-making capacity” means a patient's ability to understand and
appreciate the nature and consequences of a particular health-care decision,
including the benefits and risks of that decision and alternatives to any
proposed health care, and to reach an informed health-care decision.
(c)
“Delaware Medical Orders for Scope of Treatment (DMOST)” means a clinical
process to facilitate communication between health-care professionals and
patients living with serious illness or frailty whose health-care practitioner
would not be surprised if they died within the next year or, if the patient
lacks decision-making capacity, the patient’s authorized representative. The
process encourages shared, informed medical decision-making. The result is a
DMOST form, which contains portable medical orders that respect the patient’s
goals for care in regard to the use of CPR and other medical interventions. The
DMOST form is applicable across health-care settings, is reviewable, and is revocable.
(d) “Department”
means the Department of Health and Social Services.
(e) “DMOST form” means a standardized
document created or approved by the Department that is uniquely identifiable
and has a uniform format or color, which:
(1) Is used on a voluntary
basis by patients living with serious
illness or frailty whose health-care practitioner would not be surprised if
they died within the next year;
(2) Is not an advance
health-care directive;
(3) Is not valid unless it
meets the requirements for a completed DMOST form as
set forth in this chapter;
(4) Is intended to
provide direction to emergency care personnel regarding the use of emergency
care and to health-care providers regarding the use of life-sustaining
treatment by indicating the patient’s preference concerning the scope of
treatment, the use of specified interventions, and the intensity of treatment
for each intervention;
(5) Is intended to accompany the
patient, and to be honored by all personnel attending the patient, across the
full range of possible health-care settings, including but not limited to the patient’s home, a health-care institution, at the
scene of a medical emergency, or during transport;
(6) May be reviewed or voided at any time by a patient with
decision-making capacity or, if the patient lacks decision-making capacity, the
patient’s representative in accordance with the provisions of section 2511A of
this chapter; and
(7) Must be signed by a health-care practitioner.
(f)
“Emergency-care provider” means an emergency medical technician, paramedic, or
first responder authorized under Chapter 97 of this title.
(g)
“Health-care institution” means an institution, facility, or agency licensed,
certified or otherwise authorized or permitted by law to provide health care in
the ordinary course of business.
(h) “Health-care practitioner” means a physician
or an individual licensed and authorized to write medical orders under Title 24
of Delaware Code who is providing care for the patient or overseeing the health
care provided to a patient and has completed all training required by the
Department for individuals participating in the completion of a DMOST form.
Over time, a patient’s health-care practitioner may change.
(i)
“Health-care provider” means an individual licensed, certified, or otherwise
authorized or permitted by law to provide health care in the ordinary course of
business or practice of a profession. A
health-care practitioner is also a health-care provider.
(j)
“Life-sustaining treatment” includes any medical intervention, including
procedures, administration of medication, or use of a medical device, that
maintains life by sustaining, restoring, or supplanting a vital function. It
does not include care provided for the purpose of keeping a patient
comfortable.
(k) “Patient” means the individual who is under
the care of the health-care practitioner or health-care provider.
(l) “Patient’s authorized representative”
or “authorized representative” means the individual signing a DMOST form on
behalf of a patient without decision-making capacity, who has the highest
priority to act for the patient under law, and who has the authority to make decisions
with respect to the patient’s health-care preferences being made on the DMOST
form such individual is executing on behalf of the patient. The health-care practitioner
shall determine the individual who is the patient’s authorized representative
by referencing the documentation giving such individual the required authority
under law. The regulations implementing
this chapter shall explain the priority set by law regarding who can act as an
authorized representative. Based on the documentation provided by such
individual as evidence of his or her authority, the patient’s authorized
representative could be an individual designated by a patient under an advance health-care
directive, an agent under a medical durable power of attorney for health-care
decisions, a guardian of the person appointed pursuant to Chapters 39 and 39A of Title 12, in
accordance with the authority granted by the appointing court, a
surrogate appointed under Chapter 25 of this title, or an individual who is
otherwise authorized under applicable law to make the health-care decisions
being made by execution of the DMOST form on the patient’s behalf, if the
patient lacks decision-making capacity.
(m) “Physician” means an individual authorized to
practice medicine under 24 Del. C. Chapter 17, Subchapter III.
(n)
“Scope of treatment” means those medical interventions, procedures,
medications, and treatments that a patient, in consultation with a health-care
practitioner, has determined are appropriate, necessary and desired by and for
the patient and that a patient has determined to refuse or to allow. Scope of treatment always respects the
patient and includes the provision of comfort measures. A patient may decline
life-sustaining treatment.
§ 2504A. Duty of patient’s authorized representative.
(a) At
such time as a patient lacks decision-making capacity, the patient’s authorized
representative shall make a health-care decision to treat, withdraw, or
withhold treatment in accordance with the patient’s individual instructions as
expressed in an advance health-care directive or DMOST form, if any, and other
wishes to the extent known, or, if a guardian appointed pursuant to Chapters 39 and 39A of Title 12, in
accordance with the authority granted by the appointing court. The patient’s authorized representative shall
have the power to make any health-care decision authorized under this chapter
unless limited by the order of a court of competent jurisdiction or limited in
the document provided by the authorized representative as evidence of his or
her authority.
(b) If
the patient’s instructions or wishes are not known or clearly applicable, the
authorized representative’s decision shall conform as closely as possible to
what the patient would have done or intended under the circumstances. To the
extent the authorized representative knows or is able to determine, the
authorized representative’s decision shall take into account the following
non-exclusive list of factors, if applicable:
(1) The patient’s personal, philosophical, religious, and ethical
values.
(2) The patient’s likelihood of regaining decision-making capacity.
(3) The patient’s likelihood of death.
(4) The treatment’s burdens on and benefits to the patient.
(5) Reliable oral or written statements previously made by the
patient, including, but not limited to, statements made to family members,
friends, health-care providers, or religious leaders.
(c) The decision of an authorized representative
regarding whether life-sustaining procedures should be provided, withheld, or
withdrawn shall not be based on a patient’s status either as an individual with
a pre-existing long-term mental or physical disability, or as an individual who
is economically disadvantaged.
§ 2505A. Powers and duties of
Department of Health and Social Services.
(a) The Secretary of the
Department of Health and Social Services shall be authorized to promulgate
regulations and develop protocols to fulfill the following responsibilities:
(1) Promulgation of a DMOST form and development of the
process for completion, modification, and revocation of the DMOST form including
training requirements.
(2) Promotion of awareness among health-care
practitioners, health-care providers, emergency-care providers, and the general
public in this State about the option to complete a DMOST form.
(3) Training of emergency-care providers about the use and
application of a DMOST form.
(4) Development of additional requirements for the completion
of a DMOST form that may be applicable in the case of a patient with mental
illness or a developmental disability in consultation with organizations that
represent individuals with mental illness and development disabilities,
respectively.
(5) Ongoing evaluation of the design and use of DMOST
forms through the use of such data as the Department determines reasonably
necessary for that purpose.
(b)
The Secretary of the Department of Health and Social Services shall be
authorized to seek the imposition of civil monetary penalties under this
chapter.
§ 2506A. Powers and duties of the Department of State.
The
Secretary of State is authorized to promulgate regulations and develop
protocols for the education of all health-care providers under its licensing or
certification jurisdiction.
§ 2507A. Delaware Health Information Network.
The Delaware Health
Information Network (DHIN) is authorized to create an electronic registry to
maintain and store executed DMOST forms and make them available to emergency-care
providers, health-care providers and health-care institutions.
§ 2508A. Obligation to treat.
A
health-care practitioner, health-care provider, health-care institution, or
emergency-care provider shall treat a patient who has a completed DMOST form in
accordance with the directions and options indicated in such DMOST form, except
as otherwise provided in this chapter.
§ 2509A. Mandatory elements of DMOST
forms.
A DMOST form shall be deemed to be completed and therefore valid for the purposes of this chapter if it:
(1) Contains information indicating a patient’s
health-care preferences;
(2) Has been voluntarily signed by a patient or by another
individual subscribing the patient’s name in the patient’s presence and at the
patient’s express direction, or, if the patient does not have decision-making
capacity, by the patient’s authorized representative;
(3) Contains a
statement that the DMOST form is being signed after discussion with the
patient, or the patient’s authorized representative;
(4) Includes the signature of the patient’s health-care
practitioner and the date of the health-care practitioner’s signature;
(5) If the DMOST form is not signed by the heath-care practitioner in the presence of the patient, the DMOST form will be signed by the individual in whose presence the patient or the patient’s authorized representative signed the DMOST form;
(6) The DMOST form shall include a statement that the
patient or, if the patient does not have decision-making capacity, the
patient’s authorized representative, has been provided with a plain language
statement explaining the DMOST form and the consequences of executing the DMOST
form, including whether or not the DMOST form may be changed if the patient
lacks decision-making capacity; and
(7) Meets any other requirements established by
regulations to implement or administer this chapter.
§ 2510A. Recognition of medical orders from other
states.
A document executed in
another state, which meets the requirements of this chapter for a DMOST form or
the requirements of the state where such document was executed or the state
where the patient was a resident at the time the document was executed, shall
be deemed to be valid for the purposes of this chapter to the same extent as a
DMOST form valid under this chapter.
§ 2511A. Modification or
revocation of DMOST forms.
(a) A patient with
decision-making capacity, may, at any time, void his or her completed DMOST
form or otherwise request alternative treatment to the treatment that was
ordered on the DMOST form.
(b) If the orders in a
patient’s completed DMOST form regarding the use of any intervention specified
therein conflict with the patient’s more recent oral or written directive to
the patient’s health-care practitioner, the health-care practitioner shall
honor the more recent directive from the patient in accordance with the
provisions of subsection (d) of this section.
(c) The patient’s authorized
representative may, at any time after the patient loses decision-making
capacity and after consultation with the patient’s health-care practitioner,
request the health-care practitioner to modify or void the completed DMOST
form, or otherwise request alternative treatment to the treatment that was
ordered on the DMOST form, as the patient’s authorized representative deems
necessary to reflect the patient’s health status or goals of care, unless the patient
expressly limits the authorized representative’s authority to modify or void
the completed DMOST form. The DMOST form shall provide the patient with the
option to authorize or not to authorize the patient’s authorized representative
to void or modify the patient’s completed DMOST form if the patient who has a
completed DMOST form loses decision-making
capacity. If the patient indicates on the DMOST form that the authorized
representative is not authorized to void or modify the patient’s completed
DMOST form, the patient’s authorized representative may not do so.
(d) A DMOST form may only be modified in
consultation with the patient’s health-care practitioner in accordance with the
provisions of the applicable regulations.
§ 2512A. Resolution of conflicts.
(a)
In the event of a disagreement between the patient’s authorized representative
and the patient’s health-care practitioner concerning the patient's
decision-making capacity or the appropriate interpretation and application of
the terms of a completed DMOST form regarding the patient's course of
treatment, the parties:
(1) May seek to resolve the disagreement by means of
procedures and practices established by the health-care institution, including,
but not limited to, consultation with an institutional ethics committee, or
with an individual designated by the health-care institution for this purpose;
or
(2) May seek resolution by a court of competent
jurisdiction.
(b)
A health-care provider involved in the patient's care or an administrator of a
health-care institution may seek to resolve a disagreement concerning the
appropriate interpretation and application of the terms of a completed DMOST
form to the patient's course of treatment in the same manner as set forth in
subsection (a) of this section.
§ 2513A. Conflicting
directives.
(a) The patient’s scope
of treatment shall be governed by the latest directive available.
(b) If the treatment
directives of a later advance health-care directive conflict with the
patient's directives on a DMOST form, a health-care practitioner shall be
informed so that the DMOST form can be modified or voided in order to
reflect that patient’s later directive.
(c) If there is a
conflict between the patient's expressed oral or written directives, the DMOST
form, or the decisions of the patient’s authorized representative,
the patient's last expressed oral or written directives shall be followed
and, if necessary, a new DMOST form shall be prepared and executed.
§ 2514A. Safeguards.
Any
individual or entity may petition the Court of Chancery for appointment of a
guardian of the person of a patient if that individual or entity has good
reason to believe that the withdrawal or withholding of health care in a
particular case:
(1) Is contrary to the most recent expressed wishes of a patient;
(2) Is predicated on an incorrect assessment of the patient’s
decision-making capacity;
(3) Is being proposed pursuant
to a DMOST form that has been falsified, forged, or coerced;
(4) Is being considered without knowledge of a revocation of a
completed DMOST form which has been unlawfully concealed, destroyed, altered,
or cancelled; or
(5) Is based on a patient’s status either as an individual with a
pre-existing long-term mental or physical disability, or as an individual who
is economically disadvantaged.
§
2515A. Immunity.
A health-care institution,
health-care practitioner, or health-care provider acting in good faith and in
accordance with generally accepted health-care standards applicable to the
health-care institution, health-care practitioner, or health-care provider is
not subject to civil or criminal liability or to discipline for unprofessional
conduct for:
(1) Complying with a DMOST
form signed by a health-care practitioner apparently having authority to make a
DMOST for a patient, including a decision to withhold or withdraw health care;
(2) Declining to comply with a
DMOST form based on a belief that the health-care practitioner then lacked
authority to sign a DMOST;
(3) Complying with a DMOST
form and assuming that the DMOST form was valid when made and has not been
modified or voided;
(4) Providing life-sustaining
treatment in an emergency situation when the existence of a DMOST form is
unknown; or
(5) Declining to comply with a
DMOST form because the DMOST form is contrary to the conscience or good faith
medical judgment of the health-care practitioner or the written policies of the
health-care institution.
§ 2516A. Assumptions and presumptions.
(a)
Neither the execution of a DMOST form under this chapter nor the fact that
health care is withheld or withdrawn from a patient in accordance therewith
shall, for any purpose, constitute a suicide.
(b) The
completion of a DMOST form pursuant to this chapter shall not be deemed or
presumed to modify the terms of an existing insurance policy. No policy of
insurance shall be legally impaired or invalidated in any manner by the
withholding or withdrawal of health care from an insured patient,
notwithstanding any term of the policy to the contrary.
(c) No
health-care institution, health-care provider, health-care service plan,
insurer issuing disability insurance, self-insured employee welfare benefit
plan, nonprofit hospital service plan, or any other type of direct or indirect
provider of health-care benefits or services, shall require any individual to
execute a DMOST form as a condition to being insured, to receiving care, or to
being admitted to a health-care institution in order to receiving health-care
services.
§ 2517A. Penalties.
(a) A
health-care provider who fails to act in accordance with the requirements of
this chapter is subject to discipline for professional misconduct.
(b)
A health-care institution that intentionally fails to act in accordance with
the requirements of this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty of not
more than $1,000 for each offense. For the purposes of this subsection, each
violation shall constitute a separate offense.
(c)
An emergency-care provider subject to regulation by the Department who
intentionally fails to act in accordance with the requirements of this chapter
is subject to such disciplinary measures as the Secretary of Department deems
necessary and consistent with the Department’s statutory authority.
(d)
An individual who intentionally or knowingly commits any of the following acts
is guilty of a class G felony:
(1) Concealing, canceling, defacing, obliterating, or
withholding personal knowledge of a completed DMOST form or a modification or
revocation thereof, without the patient’s consent, or if the patient lacks
decision-making capacity, without the consent of the patient’s authorized
representative;
(2) Falsifying or forging a completed DMOST form or a
modification or revocation thereof; or
(3) Coercing or fraudulently inducing the completion of a
DMOST form or a modification or revocation thereof
by a patient or, if a patient lacks decision-making capacity, by a patient’s
authorized representative.
(e)
Any organization that is a health-care provider, health-care institution, or
“person” as defined in Section 102(1), of Title 18 who intentionally or
knowingly requires or prohibits the completion of a DMOST form or a
modification or revocation thereof as a condition of coverage under any policy
of health or life insurance, or an annuity, or a public benefits program, or as
a condition of the provision of health care is guilty of a class A misdemeanor
for each and every act or violation, and may be subject to suspension or
revocation of such person’s authority to do business in Delaware.
(f) The
provisions of this section shall not be construed to repeal any sanctions
applicable under any other law.
(g) The
Superior Court shall have jurisdiction over all civil monetary penalties and
offenses under this chapter.
§ 2518A.
Capacity.
(a)
An adult individual is presumed to have capacity to make a
health-care decision and to execute, modify or
void a DMOST form.
(b) A determination that a patient lacks decision-making capacity must be
made by a physician, and if a patient’s authorized representative is executing
the DMOST form such determination by a physician shall be required.
§ 2519A. Severability.
The
provisions of this chapter are severable, and if any word, phrase, clause,
sentence, section, or provision of this chapter is for any reason held to be
unconstitutional, the decision of the court shall not affect or impair any of
the remaining provisions of this chapter. It is hereby declared as the
legislative intent that this chapter would have been adopted had such
unconstitutional word, phrase, clause, sentence, section or provision thereof
not been included herein.
§ 2520A. Effect of copy.
A copy
of a DMOST form or revocation of a DMOST form has
the same effect as the original.
Section 2. Amend § 2501, Title 16 of the Delaware Code by making deletions as shown by strike through and insertions as shown by underline as follows:
§
2501 Definitions.
(h) “Health-care decision” shall mean a decision made by an individual or the individual’s agent, surrogate or guardian regarding the individual’s health care, including:
(1) Selection and discharge of health-care providers and health-care institutions;
(2) Acceptance or refusal of diagnostic tests, surgical
procedures, programs of medication, and orders not to resuscitate; and
(3) Directions to provide, withhold or withdraw artificial
nutrition and hydration and all other forms of health care. ; and
(4) Execution of a DMOST form pursuant to Chapter 25A of
this title.
Section 3. Amend § 9706, Title 16 of the Delaware Code by making deletions as shown by strike through and insertions as shown by underline as follows:
§ 9706. Office of Emergency Medical Services – Additional functions.
(h)
The Director of Public Health shall have the authority to promulgate rules for
EMS provider recognition and compliance with an advance health care directive
that has become effective pursuant to § 2503(c) of this title, or Delaware
Medical Orders for Scope of Treatment and those from other states that have
become effective pursuant to Chapter 25A of this title, and shall seek
input and review from the Board of Medical Licensure and Discipline, the
Delaware EMS Advisory Oversight Council and the Delaware State
Fire Prevention Commission. For purposes of this subsection, "EMS
provider" shall mean providers certified by the Delaware State Fire
Commission or the Board of Medical Licensure and Discipline. Office of Emergency Medical Services within
the Division of Public Health, Department of Health and Social Services. EMS providers acting in accordance with the
regulations promulgated hereunder shall be immune from criminal or civil
liability pursuant to § 2510 of this title.
(1)
The regulation shall define prehospital advanced care directive procedures to
be used for terminally ill patients only.
(2)
All sections of the regulation will insure that processes are in compliance
with Chapter 25 of this title, the "Delaware Death with Dignity Act."
The regulations shall include, but not be limited to, the following:
a. The allowable content of prehospital advanced care
directives, to include:
1. Option A (Advanced Life Support ) -- Maximal
(Restorative) Care Before Arrest, then prehospital advanced care directive; or
2. Option B (Basic Life Support) -- Limited
(Palliative) Care Only Before Arrest, then prehospital advanced care directive;
b. Methods of identification describing the methods that
can be used by persons electing to enact a prehospital advanced care directive.
The properly enacted Delaware Prehospital Advanced Care Directive Form must be
present; however, voluntary use of a Medic Alert prehospital advanced care
directive bracelet or necklace may be worn and/or a designation on a person's
driver's license or state-issued identification card pursuant to § 2718(c) of
Title 21 to indicate the presence of the form;
c. Methods of revocation of prehospital advanced care
directive describing how a prehospital advanced care directive can be revoked
per Chapter 25 of this title; and
d. Reciprocity to allow Delaware EMS providers to
recognize prehospital advanced care directives from neighboring states for
persons in Delaware.
Section 4. Amend § 2501, Title 16 of the Delaware Code by making insertions as shown by underlining and deletions as shown by strike through as follows:
§ 2501 Definitions.
(r) "Qualifying condition'' means the existence of 1 or more of the following conditions in the patient, certified in writing in the patient's medical record by the attending physician and by at least 1 other physician who, when the condition in question is "permanently unconscious'' shall be a board-certified neurologist and/or neurosurgeon:
(3) “Serious
illness or frailty” means a condition based on which the health-care
practitioner would not be surprised if the patient died within the next year.
Section 5. This Act shall take effect upon the adoption of regulations by the Department of Health and Social Services which will occur no later than one year from enactment.
SYNOPSIS
This Act authorizes the use of Medical Orders for Scope of Treatment in Delaware. This document, a “DMOST form,” will allow Delawareans to plan ahead for health-care decisions, express their wishes in writing, and both enable and obligate health care professionals to act in accordance with a patient’s expressed preferences. Section 1 of this Bill adds a new chapter outlining the scope and requirements of a DMOST. The statute authorizes a medical order which is transportable, standardized, and implements a patient's end-of-life care preferences. In order to implement that statute, adjustments are made in Section 2 to the existing advance-care directive statute, and in Section 3 to the statute governing Emergency Medical Services. Section 3 also makes a technical name change within Chapter 97 that was overlooked in a 2003 change to Chapter 97 and adds reference to DMOST in Public Health’s rule writing authority. Section 4 adds language to the Advance Health Care Directive statute to give agents the authority to act pursuant to this new Chapter 25A. |