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A06761 Summary:

BILL NOA06761
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORReyes
 
COSPNSRPaulin, Hevesi, Rosenthal L, Dinowitz, Epstein, Burdick, Seawright, Tapia, Bichotte Hermelyn, Simon
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd 2504, 2305, 17, 18 & 2168, Pub Health L; amd 9.13, 22.11, 33.21 & 33.16, Ment Hyg L; amd 372, 373-a & 366, add 373-b, Soc Serv L; add 3244, Ins L
 
Allows homeless youth to give effective consent to certain medical, dental, health, and hospital services; provides for insurance coverage of such health care services consented to by such youth.
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A06761 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A6761
 
SPONSOR: Reyes
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the public health law, the mental hygiene law, the social services law, and the insurance law, in relation to allowing certain youth to give effective consent to medical, dental, health, and/or hospital services and immunizations   PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL: To enable decisionally-capable minors to consent to their medical, dental, health, and hospital care.   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section 1 amends Public Health Law (PHL) section 2504 subdivision 1 to add that a minor who comprehends the need for, the nature of, and the reasonably foreseeable risks and benefits involved in a health service, as well as alternatives, may consent to the service on their own. § 2 amends Mental Hygiene Law (MHL) § 9.13 subdivision (a) to allow minors meeting the requirements under PHL 2504 to consent to inpatient mental health care. § 3 amends MHL § 22.11 to allow minors meeting the requirements under PHL 2504 to consent to inpatient, residential, or outpatient chemical dependence treatment, and allows qualified health professionals other than solely physicians to provide such treatment. § 4 amends MHL § 33.21 to allow minors meeting the requirements under PHL 2504 to consent to outpatient mental health care. § 5 amends PHL § 2305 to allow minors meeting the requirements under PHL 2504 to consent to diagnosis and treatment of sexually transmitted infections and allows qualified health professionals other than solely physicians to provide such treatment. § 6 amends Social Services Law (SSL) § 372 subdivision 8 to protect the confidentiality of health care information related to services a minor had consented to themselves under PHL 2504 in instances when the minor is being placed into kinship care. § 7 amends SSL § 373-a to protect the confidentiality of health care information related to services a minor had consented to themselves under PHL 2504 in instances when the minor is being placed into adoptive or foster care. § 8 creates a new SSL § 373-b to require social services districts and agencies to offer and provide, if requested, information about reproduc- tive and sexual health care services to all foster parents and youth. § 9 amends SSL § 366 to provide that a minor who consents to care under PHL 2504 and has no other source of health insurance shall be eligible for Medicaid coverage of the specific services they consented to. § 10 amends PHL § 17 to protect the confidentiality of health records of a minor who consented to care under PHL 2504 and to make clear that such a minor may request their own medical records. § 11 amends PHL § 18 to protect the confidentiality of health records of a minor who consented to care under PHL 2504 and make clear that such a minor may authorize disclosure of such information and release of their records if they so choose. § 12 amends MHL 33.16 to protect the confidentiality of mental health records of a minor who consented to care under PHL 2504 and make clear that such a minor may authorize disclosure of such information and release Of their records if they so choose. § 13 amends Insurance Law 3244 to protect the confidentiality of a minor who consented to care under PHL 2504 by enabling the minor to re-direct an explanation of benefits form for that care to an address (or email address) of their choosing and to suppress that information from any online portal their parent(s) or guardian(s) may use to access explana- tions of benefits. § 14 amends PHL § 2168 to protect the confidentiality of immunization records for an immunization that a minor consented to themself. § 15 is the effective date: 180 days after it becomes a law.   JUSTIFICATION: Timely treatment and preventative care are critical for young people's health and wellbeing, enabling them to excel in school and beyond. Current law generally requires parental consent for minors to receive health care unless the minor is married, has a child, serves in the armed forces, or is emancipated or incarcerated, but the need for parental consent can be a huge barrier to accessing needed health care. This bill will enable minors capable of making certain health care deci- sions to consent to such health care services. Involving parents and guardians in a young person's health care deci- sions is ideal, and, indeed, parent and family support is a primary predictor of a young person's wellbeing. At the same time, not all young people have healthy, safe family relationships. In many cases, and particularly for sensitive or highly personal care, young people will not seek health care if they are required to involve a parent or have their confidentiality compromised. Recognizing the importance of young people's access to health care, New York State currently permits a narrow subset of young people to consent to all of their health care and permits all young people to consent to certain types of confidential health care, such as reproductive health care. However, this patchwork of laws leaves some young people without a path to receive needed care. In 1990, the only court in New York to consider whether a mature young person could consent to their own health care recognized the gaps in New York law and recommended "that the legislature or the appellate courts take a hard look at the 'mature minor' doctrine   the doctrine that allows decisionallycapable young people to consent to their own health care and make it either statutory or decisional law in New York State." In re Application of Long Island Jewish Med. Ctr., 557 N.Y.S.2d 239, 243 (Sup. Ct. Queens Cty. 1990). In adopting such a law, New York would join more than 20 states that, either through statute or judicial decision, allow at least some young people to consent to their own health care. This comprehensive legislation would fill New York's legal gaps and allow decisionally-capable young people meaning young people who are mature enough to understand the need for, the nature of, and the reason- ably foreseeable risks and benefits involved in the contemplated health care, as well as any alternatives to that care - to consent to their own health care. The bill also removes related barriers to young people's access to health care and expands confidentiality protections for young people who consent to their own care. It also sets up a payment mech- anism that allows young people who do not have health insurance or who cannot use their parents' health insurance to enroll in Medicaid for the health care they consent to themselves without having to withdraw from their parents' health insurance for other types of care. Parents will - and should - continue to be involved in the vast majority of young people's health care decisions. This bill, however, sets up an important safety-net to allow those young people who have unsafe family relationships or who are unable to involve their families to seek and receive necessary health care.   PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: New bill   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: None.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after it shall have become a law. Effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or repeal of any rule or regulation necessary for the implementation of this act on its effective date are authorized to be made and completed on or before such effective date.
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