2012 North Dakota Century Code Title 25 Mental and Physical Illness or Disability Chapter 25-03.1 Commitment Procedures
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CHAPTER 25-03.1
COMMITMENT PROCEDURES
25-03.1-01. Legislative intent.
The provisions of this chapter are intended by the legislative assembly to:
1. Provide prompt evaluation and treatment of persons with serious mental disorders or
chemical dependency.
2. Safeguard individual rights.
3. Provide continuity of care for persons with serious mental disorders or chemical
dependency.
4. Encourage the full use of all existing agencies, professional personnel, and public
funds to prevent duplication of services and unnecessary expenditures.
5. Encourage, whenever appropriate, that services be provided within the community.
25-03.1-02. Definitions.
In this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:
1. "Alternative treatment order" means an involuntary outpatient order for a treatment
program, other than hospitalization, which may include treatment with a prescribed
medication.
2. "Chemically dependent person" means an individual with an illness or disorder
characterized by a maladaptive pattern of usage of alcohol or drugs, or a combination
thereof, resulting in social, occupational, psychological, or physical problems.
3. "Consent" means voluntary permission that is based upon full disclosure of facts
necessary to make a decision and which is given by an individual who has the ability
to understand those facts.
4. "Court" means, except when otherwise indicated, the district court serving the county
in which the respondent resides.
5. "Department" means the department of human services.
6. "Director" means the director of a treatment facility or the director's designee.
7. "Expert examiner" means a licensed physician, psychiatrist, psychologist trained in a
clinical program, or licensed addiction counselor appointed by the court to examine the
respondent and to provide an evaluation of whether the respondent is a person
requiring treatment.
8. "Independent expert examiner" means a licensed physician, psychiatrist, psychologist
trained in a clinical program, or licensed addiction counselor, chosen at the request of
the respondent to provide an independent evaluation of whether the respondent is a
person requiring treatment.
9. "Magistrate" means the judge of the appropriate district or juvenile court or a judge
assigned by the presiding judge of the judicial district.
10. "Mental health professional" means:
a. A psychologist with at least a master's degree who has been either licensed or
approved for exemption by the North Dakota board of psychology examiners.
b. A social worker with a master's degree in social work from an accredited program.
c. A registered nurse with a master's degree in psychiatric and mental health
nursing from an accredited program.
d. A registered nurse with a minimum of two years of psychiatric clinical experience
under the supervision of a registered nurse as defined by subdivision c or of an
expert examiner.
e. A licensed addiction counselor.
f. A licensed professional counselor with a master's degree in counseling from an
accredited program who has either successfully completed the advanced training
beyond the master's degree as required by the national academy of mental
health counselors or a minimum of two years of clinical experience in a mental
health agency or setting under the supervision of a psychiatrist or psychologist.
11. "Mentally ill person" means an individual with an organic, mental, or emotional disorder
which substantially impairs the capacity to use self-control, judgment, and discretion in
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the conduct of personal affairs and social relations. "Mentally ill person" does not
include an individual with an intellectual disability of significantly subaverage general
intellectual functioning which originates during the developmental period and is
associated with impairment in adaptive behavior, although a person who is
intellectually disabled may also suffer from a mental illness. Chemical dependency
does not per se constitute mental illness, although persons suffering from that
condition may also be suffering from mental illness.
"Person requiring treatment" means a person who is mentally ill or chemically
dependent, and there is a reasonable expectation that if the person is not treated for
the mental illness or chemical dependency there exists a serious risk of harm to that
person, others, or property. "Serious risk of harm" means a substantial likelihood of:
a. Suicide, as manifested by suicidal threats, attempts, or significant depression
relevant to suicidal potential;
b. Killing or inflicting serious bodily harm on another person or inflicting significant
property damage, as manifested by acts or threats;
c. Substantial deterioration in physical health, or substantial injury, disease, or
death, based upon recent poor self-control or judgment in providing one's shelter,
nutrition, or personal care; or
d. Substantial deterioration in mental health which would predictably result in
dangerousness to that person, others, or property, based upon evidence of
objective facts to establish the loss of cognitive or volitional control over the
person's thoughts or actions or based upon acts, threats, or patterns in the
person's treatment history, current condition, and other relevant factors, including
the effect of the person's mental condition on the person's ability to consent.
"Private treatment facility" means any facility established under chapter 10-19.1 or
10-33 and licensed under chapter 23-16 or 50-31.
"Psychiatrist" means a licensed physician who has completed a residency program in
psychiatry.
"Public treatment facility" means any treatment facility not falling under the definition of
a private treatment facility.
"Qualified service organization" means a person or entity that provides services to a
treatment facility such as data processing, bill collecting, dosage preparation,
laboratory analysis, or legal, medical, accounting, or other professional services, and
which agrees that in dealing with patient records, it is bound by the confidentiality
restrictions of this chapter, except as otherwise provided for by law.
"Respondent" means a person subject to petition for involuntary treatment.
"Superintendent" means the state hospital superintendent or the superintendent's
designee.
"Third-party payer" means a person or entity who pays, or agrees to pay, for diagnosis
or treatment furnished to a patient on the basis of a contractual relationship with the
patient or a member of the patient's family, or on the basis of the patient's eligibility for
federal, state, or local governmental benefits, and includes any person or entity
providing audit or evaluation activities for the third-party payer.
"Treatment facility" or "facility" means any hospital including the state hospital at
Jamestown or any evaluation and treatment facility that provides directly, or by direct
arrangement with other public or private agencies, emergency evaluation and
treatment, outpatient care, and inpatient care to persons suffering from a mental
disorder or chemical dependency.
25-03.1-03. Jurisdiction.
The district courts have original jurisdiction over the proceedings governed by this chapter.
25-03.1-03.1. Disclosure of health information.
A treating facility or mental health professional may disclose individually identifiable health
information to a court, regional human service center, state's attorney, retained counsel, or other
mental health professional, including an expert examiner, and the disclosure is a disclosure for
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treatment, including the provision, coordination, and management of health care and to carry
out the purposes of chapter 25-03.1.
25-03.1-04. Screening and admission to a public treatment facility.
Under rules adopted by the department, screening of an individual to a public treatment
facility for observation, diagnosis, care, or treatment for mental illness or chemical dependency
must be performed, in person whenever reasonably practicable, by a regional human service
center. This screening must be performed in the region where the individual is physically
located. Upon the request of a court, a law enforcement official, a qualified mental health
professional, the individual's legal guardian, a minor's parent or legal custodian, or the individual
requesting services, the regional human service center shall conduct a screening. If a request
for screening is made by a qualified mental health professional and the individual that is the
subject of the screening does not authorize the disclosure of the individual's protected health
information, upon the request of the regional human service center, any mental health
professional who has treated the individual within the previous six months shall disclose, subject
to the requirements of title 42, Code of Federal Regulations, part 2, to the human service center
any relevant protected health information regarding that treatment. Upon receipt of the request,
the regional human service center shall arrange for a screening of the individual and must, if
appropriate, treat the applicant, or refer the applicant to the appropriate treatment facility. Upon
admittance to a public treatment facility, the superintendent or director shall immediately
designate a physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, or mental health professional to examine the
individual.
25-03.1-05. Discharge of voluntary patients.
Any voluntary patient who has recovered, or whose treatment the superintendent or director
determines is no longer advisable, must be discharged. If, upon discharge, it is determined that
the individual would benefit from the receipt of further treatment, the superintendent or director
shall offer the individual appropriate treatment on a voluntary basis or shall aid the individual to
obtain treatment from another source on a voluntary basis. With the patient's consent,
appropriate referrals may be made for the patient.
25-03.1-06. Right to release on application - Exception - Judicial proceedings.
Any person voluntarily admitted for inpatient treatment to any treatment facility or the state
hospital must be orally advised of the right to release and must be further advised in writing of
the rights under this chapter. A voluntary patient who requests release must be immediately
released. However, if the superintendent or the director determines that the patient is a person
requiring treatment, the release may be postponed until judicial proceedings for involuntary
treatment have been held in the county where the hospital or facility is located. The patient must
be served the petition within twenty-four hours, exclusive of weekends and holidays, from the
time release is requested, unless extended by the magistrate for good cause shown. The
treatment hearing must be held within seven days from the time the petition is served.
25-03.1-07. Involuntary admission standards.
A person may be involuntarily admitted under this chapter to the state hospital or another
treatment facility only if it is determined that the individual is a person requiring treatment.
25-03.1-08. Application to state's attorney or retained attorney - Petition for
involuntary treatment - Investigation by qualified mental health professional.
Any person eighteen years of age or over shall present the information necessary for the
commitment of an individual for involuntary treatment to the state's attorney of the county where
the respondent is presently located, or which is the respondent's place of residence, or to an
attorney retained by that person to represent the applicant throughout the proceedings. The
attorney shall assist the person in completing the petition. The petition must be verified by
affidavit of the applicant and contain assertions that the respondent is a person requiring the
treatment; the facts, in detail, that are the basis of that assertion; the names, telephone
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numbers, and addresses, if known, of any witnesses to those facts; and, if known, the name,
telephone number, and address of the nearest relative or guardian of the respondent, or, if
none, of a friend of the respondent. The petition may be accompanied by any of the following:
1. A written statement supporting the petition from a psychiatrist, physician, psychologist,
or addiction counselor who is practicing within the professional scope of practice and
who has personally examined the respondent within forty-five days of the date of the
petition.
2. One or more supporting affidavits otherwise corroborating the petition.
In assisting the person in completing the petition, the state's attorney may direct a qualified
mental health professional designated by the regional human service center to investigate and
evaluate the specific facts alleged by the applicant. The investigation must be completed as
promptly as possible and include observations of and conversation with the respondent, unless
the respondent cannot be found or refuses to meet with the mental health professional. A written
report of the results of the investigation must be delivered to the state's attorney. Copies of the
report must be made available upon request to the respondent, the respondent's counsel, and
any expert examiner conducting an examination under section 25-03.1-11. The state's attorney
or retained attorney shall file the petition if the information provided by the petitioner or gathered
by investigation provides probable cause to believe that the subject of the petition is a person
requiring treatment. A state's attorney who determines there are insufficient grounds for filing a
petition may refer the applicant to other community resources. A state's attorney's decision not
to institute proceedings may be reviewed under section 11-16-06.
25-03.1-09. Review of petition for involuntary treatment - Probable cause established Respondent notified - Rights.
1. Upon the filing of a petition for involuntary treatment, the clerk of court shall
immediately notify the magistrate who shall review the petition and accompanying
documentation to determine whether it complies with requirements of section
25-03.1-08 and whether it establishes probable cause to believe the respondent is a
person requiring treatment. If probable cause has not been so established, the petition
must be dismissed unless an amendment would cure the defect.
2. If probable cause has been established, the magistrate shall cause to be served on
the respondent and the respondent's nearest relative or guardian or, if none, a friend of
the respondent:
a. A copy of the petition and supporting documentation.
b. A notice informing the respondent of the procedures required by this chapter.
c. A notice of the respondent's right to a preliminary and a treatment hearing when
in custody under section 25-03.1-25 and if mental illness or a combination of
mental illness and chemical dependency of the respondent is alleged in the
petition, or, if not in custody or if in custody and chemical dependency alone is
alleged in the petition, the right to a treatment hearing; of the right to be present
at the hearings; of the right to have counsel before the hearings and any
court-ordered examination; of the right to an independent evaluation; and, if the
respondent is indigent, of the right to counsel and to an independent expert
examiner, each at the expense of the county which is the respondent's place of
residence.
d. Notice that if an independent expert examiner is to be appointed, the respondent
must be given an opportunity to select that examiner.
25-03.1-10. Involuntary treatment - Court-ordered examination.
If the petition is not accompanied by a written supportive statement of a psychiatrist,
physician, psychologist, or addiction counselor who has examined the respondent within the last
forty-five days, the court shall order the respondent to be examined by an expert examiner of
the respondent's own choice or one appointed by the court. The order must state the date and
time within which the respondent must appear; the address to which the respondent is to report;
a statement that if the respondent fails to appear at the appointed place at or before the ordered
date and time, the respondent may be involuntarily taken into custody and transported to the
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appointed place; and a statement that the expert examiner may consult with or request
participation in the examination by a qualified mental health professional and may include with
the written examination report any findings or observations by that mental health professional.
Accompanying the order must be an explanation of the intended uses and possible effects of
this examination. The examination may be conducted at a treatment facility, at the respondent's
home, or at any other suitable place in the community. A request for examination at the state
hospital must be screened and approved by a regional human service center. The respondent
may be accompanied by one or more relatives or friends at the place of the examination. The
costs of the court-ordered examination must be borne by the county that is the respondent's
place of residence.
25-03.1-10.1. Use of telemedicine technology authorized.
For purposes of court-ordered examinations conducted under this chapter, an expert
examiner may use telemedicine technologies to assist the expert examiner in conducting those
examinations.
25-03.1-11. Involuntary treatment - Examination - Report.
1. The respondent must be examined within a reasonable time by an expert examiner as
ordered by the court. If the respondent is taken into custody under the emergency
treatment provisions of this chapter, the examination must be conducted within
twenty-four hours, exclusive of holidays, of custody. Any expert examiner conducting
an examination under this section may consult with or request participation in the
examination by any qualified mental health professional and may include with the
written examination report any findings or observations by that mental health
professional. This examination report, and that of the independent examiner, if one has
been requested, must be filed with the court. The report must contain:
a. Evaluations of the respondent's physical condition and mental status.
b. A conclusion as to whether the respondent is a person requiring treatment, with a
clear explanation of how that conclusion was derived from the evaluation.
c. If the report concludes that the respondent is a person requiring treatment, a list
of available forms of care and treatment that may serve as alternatives to
involuntary hospitalization.
d. The signature of the examiner who prepared the report.
2. For purposes of any examination conducted pursuant to this section:
a. An evaluation of a respondent's physical condition may be made only by a
licensed physician or psychiatrist.
b. An evaluation of a respondent's mental status may be made only by a licensed
physician, psychiatrist, or psychologist trained in a clinical program.
c. An evaluation of whether the respondent is chemically dependent may be made
only by a licensed physician, psychiatrist, licensed addiction counselor, or
licensed psychologist trained in a clinical program.
3. If the expert examiner concludes that the respondent is not a person requiring
treatment, the court may without taking any other additional action terminate the
proceedings and dismiss the petition. If the expert examiner concludes that the
respondent is a person requiring treatment, or makes no conclusion thereon, the court
shall set a date for hearing and shall give notice of hearing to the persons designated
in section 25-03.1-12. If the respondent is in custody and is alleged to be suffering
from mental illness or a combination of mental illness and chemical dependency, the
preliminary hearing date must be within four days, exclusive of weekends and
holidays, of the date respondent was taken into custody through emergency
commitment under section 25-03.1-25 unless a delay or continuance is concurred in
by the respondent or unless extended by the magistrate for good cause shown. If a
preliminary hearing is not required, the treatment hearing must be held within four
days, exclusive of weekends and holidays, of the date the court received the expert
examiner's report, not to exceed fourteen days from the time the petition was served.
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25-03.1-11.1. Combination of preliminary and treatment hearings.
With the consent of the court, the parties may waive the preliminary hearing and conduct
the treatment hearing within the time period set for the preliminary hearing.
25-03.1-12. Notice of hearings.
The court shall cause notice of a petition and of the time and place of any hearings under
this chapter to be given to the respondent; the respondent's parents, if a minor; the respondent's
attorney; the petitioner; the state's attorney; the superintendent or the director of any hospital or
treatment facility in which the respondent is hospitalized or is being treated; the spouse of the
respondent, if the spouse's whereabouts is known; the guardian, if any, of the respondent; and
such other relatives or persons as the court may determine. The notice must be given at the
earliest possible time and sufficiently in advance of the hearing date to permit preparation for
the hearing.
25-03.1-13. Right to counsel - Indigency - Waiver - Recoupment - Limitations.
1. Every respondent under this chapter is entitled to legal counsel. The counsel has
access to the respondent's medical records upon proof of representation.
2. Unless an appearance has been entered on behalf of the respondent, the court shall,
within twenty-four hours, exclusive of weekends or holidays, from the time the petition
was filed, appoint counsel to represent the respondent. If a respondent retains
counsel, the retained counsel shall immediately notify the court of that fact.
3. If, after consultation with counsel, the respondent wants to waive the right to counsel
or the right to any of the hearings provided for under this chapter, the respondent may
do so by notifying the court in writing. The notification must clearly state the
respondent's reasons for the waiver and must also be signed by counsel.
4. If the court determines that the respondent is indigent, the court shall order that
appointed counsel be compensated from county funds of the county that is the
respondent's place of residence in a reasonable amount based upon time and
expenses. After notice and hearing, the court may order a respondent with appointed
counsel to reimburse the county for expenditures made on the respondent's behalf.
5. If the state's attorney of a county that has expended sums under subsection 4 on
behalf of a respondent who is liable to reimburse the county determines that the
respondent may have funds or property to reimburse the county, the state's attorney
shall seek civil recovery of those sums. Commencement of the action must occur
within six years after the date the sums were paid.
25-03.1-14. Duty of state's attorney in court proceedings.
Unless the petitioner has retained an attorney, the state's attorney for the county in which
proceedings under this chapter are initiated shall appear and represent the state in all court
proceedings and hearings. The state's attorney or an attorney retained by the petitioner need
not appear at proceedings initiated by the state hospital under sections 25-03.1-23 and
25-03.1-26. The county of residence of the respondent shall bear the cost of the state's attorney
in such proceedings in a reasonable amount based upon time and expenses.
25-03.1-15. Respondent's attendance at hearings.
The respondent must be present at all hearings unless the respondent waives the right to
be present either orally or in writing. The judge must be notified if the respondent has been
medicated within twenty-four hours of the beginning of the hearing or an adjourned session
thereof, and of the probable effects of the medication.
25-03.1-16. Medication pending treatment order.
A patient who has requested release or a person who is the subject of a petition for
treatment has the right to refuse medication and other forms of treatment before the preliminary
or treatment hearing. However, a physician may prescribe medication or a less restrictive
alternative if it is necessary to prevent bodily harm to the respondent or others or to prevent
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imminent deterioration of the respondent's physical or mental condition. The patient has the
right to be free of the effects of medication at the preliminary or treatment hearing by
discontinuance of medication no later than twenty-four hours before the hearing unless, in the
opinion of the prescribing physician, the need for the medication still exists or discontinuation
would hamper the respondent's preparation for and participation in the proceedings.
25-03.1-17. Involuntary treatment - Right to preliminary hearing.
A respondent who is in custody under section 25-03.1-25 and who is alleged to be mentally
ill or to be suffering from a combination of chemical dependency and mental illness is entitled to
a preliminary hearing. At the preliminary hearing the magistrate shall review the medical report.
During the hearing the petitioner and the respondent must be afforded an opportunity to testify
and to present and cross-examine witnesses, and the court may receive the testimony of any
other interested person. The magistrate may receive evidence that would otherwise be
inadmissible at a treatment hearing. At the conclusion of the hearing, if the court does not find
probable cause to believe that the individual is a person requiring treatment, the petition must
be dismissed. The person must be ordered discharged from the treatment facility if that person
has been detained before the hearing. If the court finds probable cause to believe that the
respondent is a person requiring treatment, it shall consider less restrictive alternatives to
involuntary detention and treatment. The court may then order the respondent to undergo up to
fourteen days' treatment under a less restrictive alternative or, if it finds that alternative
treatment is not in the best interests of the respondent or others, it shall order the respondent
detained for up to fourteen days for involuntary treatment in a treatment facility.
The court shall specifically state to the respondent and give written notice that if involuntary
treatment beyond the fourteen-day period is to be sought, the respondent will have the right to a
treatment hearing as required by this chapter.
25-03.1-18. Involuntary treatment - Release.
The superintendent or the director may release a patient subject to a fourteen-day
evaluation and treatment order or a seven-day emergency order if, in the superintendent's or
director's opinion, the respondent does not meet the criteria of a person requiring treatment or,
before the expiration of the fourteen-day order, the respondent no longer requires inpatient
treatment. The court must be notified of the release and the reasons therefor. If the respondent
is released because the respondent does not meet the criteria of a person requiring treatment,
the court shall dismiss the petition.
25-03.1-18.1. Court-authorized involuntary treatment with prescribed medication.
1. a. Upon notice and hearing, a treating psychiatrist may request authorization from
the court to treat a person under a mental health treatment order with prescribed
medication. The request may be considered by the court in an involuntary
treatment hearing. As a part of the request, the treating psychiatrist and another
licensed physician or psychiatrist not involved in the current diagnosis or
treatment of the patient shall certify:
(1) That the proposed prescribed medication is clinically appropriate and
necessary to effectively treat the patient and that the patient is a person
requiring treatment;
(2) That the patient was offered that treatment and refused it or that the patient
lacks the capacity to make or communicate a responsible decision about
that treatment;
(3) That prescribed medication is the least restrictive form of intervention
necessary to meet the treatment needs of the patient; and
(4) That the benefits of the treatment outweigh the known risks to the patient.
b. The court shall inquire whether the patient has had a sufficient opportunity to
adequately prepare to meet the issue of involuntary treatment with prescribed
medication and, at the request of the patient, the court may continue the
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3.
4.
involuntary treatment hearing for a period not exceeding seven days or may
appoint an independent expert examiner as provided in subsection 4.
a. Evidence of the factors certified under subsection 1 may be presented to the
court at an involuntary treatment hearing held pursuant to sections 25-03.1-19
and 25-03.1-22, or at a separate hearing after motion and notice. The court in
ruling on the requested authorization for involuntary treatment with prescribed
medication shall consider all relevant evidence presented at the hearing,
including:
(1) The danger the patient presents to self or others;
(2) The patient's current condition;
(3) The patient's treatment history;
(4) The results of previous medication trials;
(5) The efficacy of current or past treatment modalities concerning the patient;
(6) The patient's prognosis; and
(7) The effect of the patient's mental condition on the patient's capacity to
consent.
b. Involuntary treatment with prescribed medication may not be authorized by the
court solely for the convenience of facility staff or for the purpose of punishment.
If the factors certified under subsection 1 have been demonstrated by clear and
convincing evidence, the court may include in its involuntary treatment order a
provision, or it may issue a separate order after notice and hearing, authorizing the
treating psychiatrist to involuntarily treat the patient with prescribed medication on
such terms and conditions as are appropriate. The order for involuntary treatment with
prescribed medication, however, may not be in effect for more than ninety days.
If a patient has requested an examination by an independent expert examiner under
this chapter, and if the treating psychiatrist has requested authorization for involuntary
treatment with prescribed medication, only a psychiatrist may independently examine
the patient as to the issue of involuntary treatment with prescribed medication.
25-03.1-19. Involuntary treatment hearing.
The involuntary treatment hearing, unless waived by the respondent or the respondent has
been released as a person not requiring treatment, must be held within fourteen days of the
preliminary hearing. If the preliminary hearing is not required, the involuntary treatment hearing
must be held within four days, exclusive of weekends and holidays, of the date the court
received the expert examiner's report, not to exceed fourteen days from the time the petition
was served. The court may extend the time for hearing for good cause. The respondent has the
right to an examination by an independent expert examiner if so requested. If the respondent is
indigent, the county of residence of the respondent shall pay for the cost of the examination and
the respondent may choose an independent expert examiner.
The hearing must be held in the county of the respondent's residence or location or the
county where the state hospital or treatment facility treating the respondent is located. At the
hearing, evidence in support of the petition must be presented by the state's attorney, private
counsel, or counsel designated by the court. During the hearing, the petitioner and the
respondent must be afforded an opportunity to testify and to present and cross-examine
witnesses. The court may receive the testimony of any other interested person. All persons not
necessary for the conduct of the proceeding must be excluded, except that the court may admit
persons having a legitimate interest in the proceeding. The hearing must be conducted in as
informal a manner as practical, but the issue must be tried as a civil matter. Discovery and the
power of subpoena permitted under the North Dakota Rules of Civil Procedure are available to
the respondent. The court shall receive all relevant and material evidence which may be offered
as governed by the North Dakota Rules of Evidence. There is a presumption in favor of the
respondent, and the burden of proof in support of the petition is upon the petitioner.
If, upon completion of the hearing, the court finds that the petition has not been sustained
by clear and convincing evidence, it shall deny the petition, terminate the proceeding, and order
that the respondent be discharged if the respondent has been hospitalized before the hearing.
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25-03.1-20. Involuntary treatment hearing - Findings and dispositions.
If an individual is found at the involuntary treatment hearing to be a person requiring
treatment, the findings and conclusions must be entered in the record of the proceedings and
the court may:
1. Order the individual to undergo a program of treatment other than hospitalization;
2. Order the individual hospitalized in a public institution; or
3. Order the individual hospitalized in any other private hospital if the attending physician
agrees. The reason supporting the court's particular treatment order must be entered
in the record.
25-03.1-21. Involuntary treatment order - Alternatives to hospitalization Noncompliance with alternative treatment order - Emergency detention by certain
professionals - Application for continuing treatment order.
1. Before making its decision in an involuntary treatment hearing, the court shall review a
report assessing the availability and appropriateness for the respondent of treatment
programs other than hospitalization which has been prepared and submitted by the
state hospital or treatment facility. If the court finds that a treatment program other than
hospitalization is adequate to meet the respondent's treatment needs and is sufficient
to prevent harm or injuries which the individual may inflict upon the individual or
others, the court shall order the respondent to receive whatever treatment other than
hospitalization is appropriate for a period of ninety days.
2. If the respondent is not complying with the alternative treatment order or the
alternative treatment has not been sufficient to prevent harm or injuries that the
individual may be inflicting upon the individual or others, the department, a
representative of the treatment program involved in the alternative treatment order, the
petitioner's retained attorney, or the state's attorney may apply to the court or to the
district court of a different judicial district in which the respondent is located to modify
the alternative treatment order. The court shall hold a hearing within seven days after
the application is filed. Based upon the evidence presented at hearing and other
available information, the court may:
a. Continue the alternative treatment order;
b. Consider other alternatives to hospitalization, modify the court's original order,
and direct the individual to undergo another program of alternative treatment for
the remainder of the ninety-day period; or
c. Enter a new order directing that the individual be hospitalized until discharged
from the hospital under section 25-03.1-30. If the individual refuses to comply
with this hospitalization order, the court may direct a peace officer to take the
individual into protective custody and transport the respondent to a treatment
facility.
3. If a peace officer, physician, psychiatrist, clinical psychologist, or any mental health
professional reasonably believes that the respondent is not complying with an order for
alternative treatment, that the alternative treatment is not sufficient to prevent harm or
injuries to the respondent or others, and that considerations of time and safety do not
allow intervention by a court, the designated professional may cause the respondent to
be taken into custody and detained at a treatment facility as provided in subsection 3
of section 25-03.1-25 and, within twenty-four hours, shall file a notice with the court
stating the circumstances and factors of the case. The state hospital or public
treatment facility must immediately accept, if appropriately screened and medically
stable, and a private treatment facility may accept, the respondent on a provisional
basis. The superintendent or director shall require an immediate examination of the
respondent and, within twenty-four hours after admission, shall either release the
respondent subject to the conditions of the original order or file a notice with the court
stating in detail the circumstances and factors of the case. The court shall, within
forty-eight hours of receipt of the notice of the superintendent or director, after a
hearing and based on the evidence presented and other available information:
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a.
4.
Release the individual from hospitalization and continue the alternative treatment
order;
b. Consider other alternatives to hospitalization, modify its original order, and direct
the individual to undergo another program of alternative treatment for the
remainder of the commitment period; or
c. Enter a new order directing that the respondent remain hospitalized until
discharged from the hospital under section 25-03.1-30.
If, at the date of expiration of an order of alternative treatment, it is believed that an
individual continues to require treatment, a petition for a determination that the
individual continues to be a person requiring treatment may be filed with the court
where the individual is located.
25-03.1-22. Length of involuntary and continuing treatment orders.
1. An initial order for involuntary treatment may not exceed ninety days.
2. If the director or superintendent believes that a patient continues to require treatment,
the director or superintendent shall, not less than fourteen days before the expiration
of the initial order, petition the court where the facility is located for a determination that
the patient continues to be a person requiring treatment and for an order of continuing
treatment, which order may be for a period not to exceed one year. The court shall set
a hearing date that must be within fourteen days after the petition was filed, unless
extended for good cause shown.
3. Unless extended under section 25-03.1-31, continuing treatment orders of indefinite
duration issued before August 1, 1993, expire as follows:
a. Those orders issued before August 1, 1991, expire September 30, 1993.
b. Those orders issued from August 1, 1991, through July 31, 1992, expire
December 31, 1993.
c. Those orders issued from August 1, 1992, through August 1, 1993, expire on their
first anniversaries or on March 31, 1994, whichever is later.
4. A respondent subject to a continuing treatment order of indefinite duration retains the
rights to periodic review and to petition for discharge under section 25-03.1-31 as that
section existed on July 31, 1993.
25-03.1-23. Petition for continuing treatment orders.
A petition for an order authorizing continuing treatment must contain a statement setting
forth the reasons for the determination that the patient continues to be a person requiring
treatment; a statement describing the treatment program provided to the patient and the results
of that treatment; and a clinical estimate as to how long further treatment will be required. The
petition must be accompanied by a certificate executed by a physician, psychiatrist,
psychologist, or licensed addiction counselor, any of whom is practicing within that individual's
professional scope of practice.
25-03.1-24. Right to treat.
State hospital or treatment facility personnel may treat a patient with prescribed medication
or a less restrictive alternative if, in the opinion of a psychiatrist or physician, these treatments
are necessary to prevent bodily harm to the patient or others or to prevent imminent
deterioration of the respondent's physical or mental condition and there is not time to obtain a
court order. This chapter does not prohibit a hospital from rendering emergency medical care
without the need for consultation, if in the exercise of sound medical judgment that care is
immediately necessary and delay would endanger the life of or adversely and substantially
affect the health of the patient.
25-03.1-25. Detention or hospitalization - Emergency procedure.
1. When a peace officer, physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, or mental health
professional has reasonable cause to believe that an individual is a person requiring
treatment and there exists a serious risk of harm to that person, other persons, or
Page No. 10
2.
3.
4.
5.
property of an immediate nature that considerations of safety do not allow preliminary
intervention by a magistrate, the peace officer, physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, or
mental health professional, using the screening process set forth in section
25-03.1-04, may cause the person to be taken into custody and detained at a
treatment facility as provided in subsection 3, and subject to section 25-03.1-26,
except that if emergency conditions exist that prevent the immediate conveyance of
the individual to a public treatment facility, a private facility that has adequate
resources and capacity to hold that individual may hold the individual in anticipation of
conveyance to a public treatment facility for up to twenty-three hours:
a. Without conducting an immediate examination required under section 25-03.1-26;
and
b. Without following notice and hearing requirements for a transfer to another
treatment facility required under subsection 3 of section 25-03.1-34.
If a petitioner seeking the involuntary treatment of a respondent requests that the
respondent be taken into immediate custody and the magistrate, upon reviewing the
petition and accompanying documentation, finds probable cause to believe that the
respondent is a person requiring treatment and there exists a serious risk of harm to
the respondent, other persons, or property if allowed to remain at liberty, the
magistrate may enter a written order directing that the respondent be taken into
immediate custody and be detained as provided in subsection 3 until the preliminary or
treatment hearing, which must be held no more than seven days after the date of the
order.
Detention under this section may be:
a. In a treatment facility where the director or superintendent must be informed of
the reasons why immediate custody has been ordered. The facility may provide
treatment that is necessary to preserve the respondent's life or to appropriately
control behavior by the respondent which is likely to result in physical injury to self
or to others if allowed to continue, but may not otherwise provide treatment to the
respondent without the respondent's consent; or
b. In a public or private facility in the community which is suitably equipped and
staffed for the purpose. Detention in a jail or other correctional facility may not be
ordered except in cases of actual emergency when no other secure facility is
accessible, and then only for a period of not more than twenty-four hours and
under close supervision.
Immediately upon being taken into custody, the person must be advised of the
purpose of custody, of the intended uses and possible effects of any evaluation that
the person undergoes, and of the person's rights to counsel and to a preliminary or
treatment hearing.
Upon arrival at a facility the peace officer, physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, or
mental health professional who conveyed the person or who caused the person to be
conveyed shall complete an application for evaluation and shall deliver a detailed
written report from the peace officer, physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, or the
mental health professional who caused the person to be conveyed. The written report
must state the circumstances under which the person was taken into custody. The
report must allege in detail the overt act that constituted the basis for the beliefs that
the individual is a person requiring treatment and that, because of that person's
condition, there exists a serious risk of harm to that person, another person, or
property if the person is not immediately detained.
25-03.1-26. Emergency procedure - Acceptance of petition and individual - Notice Court hearing set.
1. A public treatment facility immediately shall accept and a private treatment facility may
accept on a provisional basis the application and the person admitted under section
25-03.1-25. The superintendent or director shall require an immediate examination of
the subject and, within twenty-four hours after admission, shall either release the
person if the superintendent or director finds that the subject does not meet the
Page No. 11
2.
emergency commitment standards or file a petition if one has not been filed with the
court of the person's residence or the court which directed immediate custody under
subsection 2 of section 25-03.1-25, giving notice to the court and stating in detail the
circumstances and facts of the case.
Upon receipt of the petition and notice of the emergency detention, the magistrate
shall set a date for a preliminary hearing, if the respondent is alleged to be suffering
from mental illness or from a combination of mental illness and chemical dependency,
or a treatment hearing, if the respondent is alleged to be suffering from chemical
dependency, to be held no later than four days, exclusive of weekends and holidays,
after detention unless the person has been released as a person not requiring
treatment, has been voluntarily admitted for treatment, has requested or agreed to a
continuance, or unless the hearing has been extended by the magistrate for good
cause shown. The magistrate shall appoint counsel if one has not been retained by the
respondent.
25-03.1-27. Notice and statement of rights.
1. Whenever any person is detained for emergency evaluation and treatment under this
chapter, the superintendent or director shall cause both the patient and, if possible, a
responsible member of the patient's immediate family, a guardian, or a friend, if any, to
receive:
a. A copy of the petition which asserted that the individual is a person requiring
treatment.
b. A written statement explaining that the individual will be examined by an expert
examiner within twenty-four hours of hospitalization, excluding holidays.
c. A written statement in simple terms explaining the rights of the individual alleged
to be suffering from mental illness or from a combination of mental illness and
chemical dependency to a preliminary hearing, to be present at the hearing, and
to be represented by legal counsel, if the individual is certified by an expert
examiner or examiners as a person requiring treatment.
d. A written statement in simple terms explaining the rights of the individual to a
treatment hearing, to be present at the hearing, to be represented by legal
counsel, and the right to an independent medical evaluation.
2. If the individual is unable to read or understand the written materials, every reasonable
effort must be made to explain them in a language the individual understands, and a
note of the explanation and by whom made must be entered into the patient record.
25-03.1-28. Records and proceedings.
A record must be made of all court hearings conducted under this chapter and a copy must
be provided to the respondent upon request for purposes of appellate review of the
proceedings. If the respondent is indigent, the copy must be provided free of charge, with the
expense thereof borne by the county of residence of the respondent.
25-03.1-29. Appeal.
The respondent has the right to an expedited appeal from an order of involuntary
commitment or alternative treatment, a continuing treatment order, an order denying a petition
for discharge, or an order of transfer. Upon entry of an appealable order, the court shall notify
the respondent of the right of appeal and the right to counsel. The notice of appeal must be filed
within thirty days after the order has been entered. Such appeal must be to the supreme court
and the hearing must be commenced within fourteen days of filing of the notice of appeal. The
hearing must be limited to a review of the procedures, findings, and conclusions of the lower
court. The name of the respondent may not appear on the record on appeal.
Pending appeal, the order appealed from shall remain in effect, unless the supreme court
determines otherwise. The respondent may not be denied the opportunity to be present at the
appeal hearing, and the court conducting the appeal may issue such interim order as will assure
Page No. 12
this opportunity to the respondent while protecting the interest sought to be served by the order
appealed from.
25-03.1-30. Discharge of hospitalized patient - Transfer to alternative treatment Termination of alternative treatment.
1. The superintendent or director may at any time discharge a voluntarily hospitalized
patient who is clinically suitable for discharge.
2. The superintendent or director shall discharge a patient hospitalized by court order
when the patient's mental condition is such that the patient no longer is a person
requiring treatment.
3. If a patient discharged under subsection 1 or 2 has been hospitalized by a court order,
or if court proceedings are pending, the court must be notified of the discharge by the
treatment facility.
4. A person responsible for providing treatment other than hospitalization to an individual
ordered to undergo a program of alternative treatment may terminate the alternative
treatment if the patient is clinically suitable for termination of treatment. The person
shall terminate the alternative treatment when the patient no longer is a person
requiring treatment and shall notify the court upon that termination.
5. If, upon the discharge of a hospitalized patient or the termination of alternative
treatment of an individual under this chapter, the individual would benefit from further
treatment, the hospital or provider of alternative treatment shall offer appropriate
treatment on a voluntary basis or shall aid the individual to obtain treatment from
another source on a voluntary basis. With the individual's consent, the superintendent
or director shall notify the appropriate community agencies or persons of the release
and of the suggested release plan. Community agencies include regional mental
health centers, state and local counseling services, public and private associations
whose function is to assist mentally ill or chemically dependent persons, and the
individual's physician. The agencies and persons notified of the individual's release
shall report to the facility that initial contact with the individual has been accomplished.
6. If, before expiration of an initial treatment order, the superintendent or director
determines that a less restrictive form of treatment would be more appropriate for a
patient hospitalized by court order, the superintendent or director may petition the
court which last ordered the patient's hospitalization to modify its order. The petition
must contain statements setting forth the reasons for the determination that the patient
continues to require treatment, the reasons for the determination that a less restrictive
form of treatment would be more appropriate for the patient, and describing the
recommended treatment program. If the patient consents, the court may, without a
hearing, modify its treatment order by directing the patient to undergo the agreed
treatment program for the remainder of the treatment order. The patient must be given
an opportunity to protest the discharge and modification of treatment order and to
receive a hearing on the merits of the protest.
25-03.1-31. Procedure to extend continuing treatment orders - Respondent's right to
petition for discharge.
1. If the director or superintendent believes that a respondent continues to be a person
requiring treatment, the director or superintendent, not less than thirty days before
expiration of the order, shall petition the court where the facility is located for another
continuing treatment order in the manner prescribed by section 25-03.1-23. The
petition must also contain a notice to the respondent that, unless the respondent
waives a hearing on the petition within fifteen days after service of the petition upon
the respondent, a hearing will be held by the court. The court shall appoint counsel for
the respondent upon receipt of the petition, unless retained counsel has appeared on
behalf of the respondent. If retained counsel has appeared, the court shall provide
notice of the petition to the attorney. If the hearing is not waived, it must be held within
thirty days after the petition was filed, unless extended for good cause shown. The
burden of proof is the same as in an involuntary treatment hearing.
Page No. 13
2.
Every individual subject to an order of continuing treatment has the right to petition the
court for discharge once annually. The petition may be presented to the court or a
representative of the facility who shall transmit it to the court forthwith. If the patient is
indigent or is unable for reasons satisfactory to the court to obtain an independent
expert examiner, the court shall appoint an independent expert examiner to examine
the patient and to furnish a report to the court. The court shall set a hearing date which
must be within fourteen days of receipt of the examiner's report. At the hearing, the
burden of proof is the same as in an involuntary treatment hearing.
25-03.1-32. Periodic hearing and petition for discharge - Continuing hospitalization.
Repealed by S.L. 1979, ch. 334, § 33.
25-03.1-33. Legal incompetence - Presumption - Finding - Adjudication negated.
1. No determination that a person requires treatment, no court order authorizing
hospitalization or alternative treatment, nor any form of admission to a hospital gives
rise to a presumption of, constitutes a finding of, or operates as an adjudication of
legal incompetence, or of the inability to give or withhold consent.
2. No order of commitment under any previous statute of this state, in the absence of a
concomitant appointment of a guardian, constitutes a finding of or operates as an
adjudication of legal incompetence, or of the inability to give or withhold consent.
25-03.1-34. Transfer of patients.
1. The superintendent or director of a treatment facility may transfer, or authorize the
transfer of, an involuntary patient from a hospital to another facility if the
superintendent or director determines that it would be consistent with the medical
needs of the patient to do so. Due consideration must be given to the relationship of
the patient to family, legal guardian, or friends, so as to maintain relationships and
encourage visits beneficial to the patient. Whenever any treatment facility licensed by
any state for the care and treatment of mentally ill or chemically dependent persons
agrees with the patient or patient's guardian to accept the patient for treatment, the
superintendent or director of the treatment facility shall release the patient to the other
facility.
2. Upon receipt of notice from an agency of the United States that facilities are available
for the care or treatment of any individual ordered hospitalized who is eligible for care
or treatment in a treatment facility of that agency, the superintendent or director of the
treatment facility may cause the individual's transfer to that agency of the United
States for treatment. No person may be transferred to any agency of the United States
if the person is confined pursuant to conviction of any felony or misdemeanor or the
person has been acquitted of the charge solely on the ground of mental illness unless
the court originally ordering confinement of the person enters an order for transfer after
appropriate motion and hearing. Any person transferred under this section to an
agency of the United States is deemed committed to that agency under the original
order of treatment.
3. No facility may transfer a patient to another hospital or agency without first notifying
the patient and the patient's legal guardian, spouse, or next of kin, if known, or a
chosen friend of the patient and the court that ordered treatment. The patient must be
given an opportunity to protest the transfer and to receive a hearing on the protest.
The patient's objection to the transfer must be presented to the court where the facility
is located or to a representative of the facility within seven days after the notice of
transfer was received. If the objection is presented to a representative of the facility,
the representative shall transmit it to the court forthwith. The court shall set a hearing
date which must be within fourteen days of the date of receipt of the objection. If an
objection has not been filed or the patient consents to a transfer, the court may enter
an ex parte order authorizing transfer.
Page No. 14
25-03.1-34.1. Exchange of chemically dependent patient or prisoner.
The director of the department of human services, a county, a city, or a local law
enforcement agency may enter into reciprocal agreements with the appropriate authorities of
any other state regarding the mutual exchange, return, and transportation of chemically
dependent or mentally ill patients or prisoners who are treated or confined in hospitals of one
state for treatment of chemical dependency or mental illness but who have legal residence in
another state.
25-03.1-34.2. Interstate contracts for treatment of mental illness or chemical
dependency.
1. For purposes of this section, "bordering state" means Minnesota, Montana, or South
Dakota.
2. Unless prohibited by another law and subject to the exceptions in subsection 3, the
department may contract with any appropriate treatment or detoxification facility in a
bordering state for the treatment of mental illness or chemical dependency or for
providing chemical dependency detoxification services for residents of North Dakota.
The department may also contract with any public or private agency or facility to
provide treatment of mental illness or chemical dependency or to provide chemical
dependency detoxification services in North Dakota to residents of a bordering state.
An individual who receives treatment for mental illness or chemical dependency or
who receives chemical dependency detoxification services in another state under this
section is subject to the laws of the state in which treatment or detoxification is
provided. An individual who receives treatment or detoxification in another state under
this section must be informed of the consequences of receiving treatment or
detoxification in another state, including the implications of the differences in state
laws.
3. A contract may not be entered under this section for treatment or detoxification to
individuals who:
a. Are serving a sentence after conviction of a criminal offense;
b. Are on probation or parole;
c. Are the subject of a presentence investigation; or
d. Have been committed involuntarily in North Dakota under chapter 25-03.1 for
treatment of mental illness or chemical dependency, except as provided under
subsection 5.
4. Contracts entered under this section must, at a minimum:
a. Describe the services to be provided;
b. Establish responsibility for the costs of services;
c. Establish responsibility for the costs of transporting individuals receiving services
under this section;
d. Specify the duration of the contract;
e. Specify the means of terminating the contract;
f. Specify the terms and conditions for refusal to admit or retain an individual; and
g. Identify the goals to be accomplished by the placement of an individual under this
section.
5. The department may enter negotiations with appropriate personnel of a bordering
state to develop an agreement that conforms to the requirements of this section. An
agreement with a bordering state must enable the placement in North Dakota of
individuals who require detoxification services, are on emergency holds, or who have
been involuntarily committed as mentally ill or chemically dependent in a bordering
state and enable the temporary placement in a bordering state of patients who require
detoxification services or who are on emergency holds in North Dakota under
chapter 25-03.1. An agreement with a bordering state must also provide that the North
Dakota courts retain jurisdiction over North Dakota residents, and that the bordering
state affords to North Dakota residents the rights afforded to them under North Dakota
law. Individuals committed by a court of a bordering state and placed in North Dakota
facilities continue to be in the legal custody of the bordering state. The bordering
Page No. 15
state's laws governing length of commitment, reexaminations, and extension of
commitment must continue to apply to these residents. In all other respects, residents
of a bordering state placed in North Dakota facilities are subject to North Dakota laws.
An agreement with a bordering state must specify that responsibility for payment for
the cost of care of a resident of a bordering state remains with the bordering state of
which that individual is a resident and the cost of care of a North Dakota resident
remains with the state of North Dakota. This section applies to detoxification services
regardless of whether the services are provided on a voluntary or involuntary basis.
25-03.1-35. Treatment by an agency of the United States.
1. If a respondent under this chapter is eligible for treatment by any agency of the United
States, the court, upon receipt of notice from that agency showing that facilities are
available and that the individual is eligible for care or treatment therein, may order the
respondent placed in the custody of the agency for treatment. Any individual admitted
under the order of the court to any treatment facility operated by any agency of the
United States within or without the state is subject to the rules and regulations of the
agency. The chief officer of any treatment facility operated by an agency has the same
powers as the heads of treatment facilities within this state with respect to detention,
custody, transfer, conditional release, or discharge of patients. Jurisdiction is retained
in the committing court of this state at any time to inquire into the mental condition of
an individual so transferred or placed and to determine the necessity for continuance
of treatment.
2. An order of a court of competent jurisdiction of another state or of the District of
Columbia authorizing treatment of an individual by any agency of the United States
has the same force and effect as to the individual while in this state as in the
geographical jurisdiction of the court entering the order; and the courts of the state or
district issuing the order retain jurisdiction of the individual for the purposes of inquiring
into the individual's mental condition and of determining the necessity for continuance
of treatment. Consent is hereby given to the application of the law of the state or
district in which the court issuing the order for treatment is located with respect to the
authority of the chief officer of any treatment facility operated in this state by any
agency of the United States to retain custody, transfer, conditionally release, or
discharge the individual being treated.
25-03.1-36. Escape of patient from treatment facility.
If any patient escapes from a treatment facility, the superintendent or director may cause an
immediate search to be made. If the patient cannot be found, the superintendent or director
shall cause notice of the escape to be given forthwith to the court of the county of residence of
the patient and to such health officials or officers of the law as may be of assistance in locating
the patient. If the patient is found in the county of residence, the court, at the request of the
superintendent or director, shall cause the patient to be returned to the treatment facility and
shall issue its order to that effect. The patient must thereupon be transported to the treatment
facility as provided in other cases. Should the patient be found other than in the county of the
patient's residence, the patient may be transported at the request of the superintendent to the
state hospital as directed and at the expense of the state hospital.
25-03.1-37. Reports to and additional powers of department.
The superintendent or director of a treatment facility, by means of nonidentifying data, shall
notify the department of all admissions under this chapter to the state hospital or facility. In
addition to the specific authority granted under the provisions of this chapter, the department
shall have authority to require nonidentifying statistical data from the head of any hospital
relating to the admission, examination, diagnosis, release, or discharge of any mentally ill
patient.
Page No. 16
25-03.1-38. Expenses of district court serving Stutsman County.
All expenses of the district court serving Stutsman County involving patients in residence at
the state hospital must be paid by the state hospital under the direction of the department.
25-03.1-39. Transportation - Expenses.
Whenever an individual is about to be involuntarily hospitalized under the provisions of this
chapter, an official or person designated by the court shall arrange for the individual's
transportation to the treatment facility with suitable medical or nursing attendants and by such
means as may be suitable for the individual's medical condition. Whenever practicable, the
individual to be hospitalized must be permitted to be accompanied by one or more of the
individual's friends or relatives, and when practicable shall not be transported by police officers
or in police vehicles. If the proposed patient is unable to pay for expenses of transportation, and
friends or relatives do not oblige themselves to pay such expenses, the court may direct that
such expenses be paid by the county of the patient's residence.
25-03.1-40. Rights of patients.
Each patient of a treatment facility retains the following rights, subject only to the limitations
and restrictions authorized by section 25-03.1-41. A patient has the right:
1. To receive appropriate treatment for mental and physical ailments and for the
prevention of illness or disability.
2. To the least restrictive conditions necessary to achieve the purposes of treatment.
3. To be treated with dignity and respect.
4. To be free from unnecessary restraint and isolation.
5. To visitation and telephone communications.
6. To send and receive sealed mail.
7. To keep and use personal clothing and possessions.
8. To regular opportunities for outdoor physical exercise.
9. To be free to exercise religious faith of choice.
10. To be free from unnecessary medication.
11. To exercise all civil rights, including the right of habeas corpus.
12. Not to be subjected to experimental research without the express and informed written
consent of the patient or of the patient's guardian.
13. Not to be subjected to psychosurgery, electroconvulsive treatment, or aversive
reinforcement conditioning, without the express and informed written consent of the
patient or of the patient's guardian.
14. In a manner appropriate to the patient's capabilities, to ongoing participation in the
planning of services.
15. Not to be required to participate in the development of an individual treatment plan.
25-03.1-41. Limitations and restrictions of patient's rights.
The rights enumerated in subsections 5, 6, 7, and 8 of section 25-03.1-40 may be limited or
restricted by the treating physician, psychiatrist, or psychologist trained in a clinical program, if
in that person's professional judgment to do so would be in the best interests of the patient and
the rights are restricted or limited in the manner authorized by the rules adopted pursuant to
section 25-03.1-46. Whenever a physician, psychiatrist, or psychologist trained in a clinical
program responsible for treatment of a particular patient imposes a special restriction on the
rights of the patient as authorized by the rules, a written order specifying the restriction and the
reasons for the restriction must be signed by the physician, psychiatrist, or psychologist trained
in a clinical program and attached to the patient's chart. These restrictions must be reviewed at
intervals of not more than fourteen days and may be renewed by following the procedure set out
in this section.
Page No. 17
25-03.1-42. Limitation of liability - Penalty for false petition.
1. A person acting in good faith upon either actual knowledge or reliable information who
makes the petition for involuntary treatment of another person under this chapter is not
subject to civil or criminal liability.
2. A physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, mental health professional, employee of a
treatment facility, state's attorney, or peace officer who in good faith exercises
professional judgment in fulfilling an obligation or discretionary responsibility under this
chapter is not subject to civil or criminal liability for acting unless it can be shown that it
was done in a negligent manner.
3. A person who makes a petition for involuntary treatment of another person without
having good cause to believe that the other person is suffering from mental illness or
chemical dependency and as a result is likely to cause serious harm to self or others is
guilty of a class A misdemeanor.
25-03.1-43. Confidential records.
All information and records obtained in the course of an investigation, an evaluation, an
examination, or treatment under this chapter and the presence or past presence of a patient in a
treatment facility are confidential, but the information and records may be disclosed to and be
used by a court as required to carry out the purposes of this chapter, and as authorized under
title 45, Code of Federal Regulations, part 164. Courts also may release nonclinical identifying
information of persons subject to proceedings under this chapter for the purposes of section
62.1-02-01.2. Any information disclosed to a court remains confidential information, except as
provided in section 62.1-02-01.2.
25-03.1-44. Records of disclosure.
Repealed by S.L. 2003, ch. 225, § 6.
25-03.1-45. Expungement of records.
Following the discharge of a respondent from a treatment facility or the state hospital or the
issuance of a court order denying a petition for commitment, a respondent may at any time
move to have all court records pertaining to the proceedings expunged on condition that the
respondent file a full release of all claims of whatever nature arising out of the proceedings.
25-03.1-46. Rules and regulations - Preparation of forms.
The department shall, under chapter 28-32, adopt and enforce such rules as may be
necessary for the implementation of this chapter. The supreme court, in consultation with the
department, the associations of district judges and state's attorneys, and other affected
organizations, is responsible for the preparation and the department is responsible for
distribution of the necessary and appropriate forms to enable compliance with this chapter.
Page No. 18
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