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MENTAL HEALTH BILL OF RIGHTS
03.04.04 from http://www.state.nh.us/mhpb/bill_of_rights.pdf
This Mental
Health Bill of Rights is provided by law to persons receiving mental health
services in the State of New Hampshire. Its purpose is to protect the rights
and enhance the well being of clients, by informing them of key aspects of
the clinical relationship. As a client of a New Hampshire Mental Health Practitioner,
you have, without asking, the right:
1. To be treated in a professional, respectful, competent
and ethical manner consistent with all applicable state laws and the following
professional ethical standards:
a. for
psychologists, the American Psychological Association;
b. for independent clinical social workers; the National
Association of Social Workers;
c. for pastoral psychotherapists; the American Association
of Pastoral Counselors
d. for clinical mental health counselors; the American Mental
Health Counselor Association; and
e. for marriage and family therapists; the American Association
for Marriage and Family Therapists.
2. To receive full
information about your treatment provider’s knowledge, skills, experience
and credentials.
3. To have the information you disclose to your mental health
provider kept confidential within the limits of state and federal law. Communications
between mental health providers and clients are typically confidential, unless
the law requires their disclosure. Mental health providers will inform you
of the legal exceptions to confidentiality, and should such an exception
arise, will share only such information as required by law. Examples of such
exceptions include but are not limited to:
a. abuse
of a child;
b. abuse of an incapacitated adult;
c. Health Information Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA) regulation compliance;
d. certain rights you may have waived when contracting for
third party financial coverage;
e. orders of the court; and
f. significant threats to self, others or property.
4. To a safe setting
and to know that the services provided are effective and of a quality consistent
with the standard of care within each profession and to know that sexual
relations between a mental health provider and a client or former client
are a violation of the law (RSA 330-A:36).
5. To obtain information, as allowed by law, pertaining to
the mental health provider’s assessment, assessment procedures and mental
health diagnoses (RSA 330-A:2 VI).
6. To participate meaningfully in the planning, implementation
and termination or referral of your treatment.
7. To documented informed consent: to be informed of the risks
and benefits of the proposed treatment, the risks and benefits of alternative
treatments and the risks and benefits of no treatment. When obtaining informed
consent for treatment for which safety and effectiveness have not been established,
therapists will inform their clients of this and of the voluntary nature
of their participation. In addition, clients have the right to be informed
of their rights and responsibilities, and of the mental health provider’s
practice policies regarding confidentiality, office hours, fees, missed appointments,
billing policies, electronic communications, managed care issues, record
management, and other relevant matters except as otherwise provided by law.
8. To obtain information regarding the provision(s) for emergency
coverage.
9. To receive a copy of your mental health record within 30
days upon written request (except as otherwise provided by law), by paying
a nominal fee designed to defray the administrative costs of reproducing
the record.
10. To know that your mental health provider is licensed by
the State of New Hampshire to provide mental health services.
a. You
have the right to obtain information about mental health practice in New
Hampshire. You may contact the Board of Mental Health Practice for a list
names, addresses, phone numbers and websites of state and national professional
associations listed in Mhp 502.02 (a)(1)(a-e).
b. You have the right to discuss questions or concerns about
the mental health services you receive with your provider.
c. You have the right to file a complaint with the Board
of Mental Health Practice.
11. A licensee
shall post a copy of the above mental health bill of rights in a prominent
location in the office of the mental health practitioner and provide a copy
upon request.
12. A licensee shall provide a copy of the mental health bill
of rights to the client and/or agency if the assessment, consultation or
intervention is provided outside the office.
To
contact the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health Providers:
http://www.nh.gov/mhpb/
Board of Mental Health Practice
49 Donovan Street, Concord, NH 03301 Telephone: 603-271-6762
TDD Access: Relay NH 1-800-735-2954
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