Clients Rights
1. The right to be treated with consideration and respect for personal dignity, autonomy and privacy.
2. The right to services in a humane setting which is the least restrictive feasible as defined by the treatment plan.
3. The right to be informed of one's own condition, of proposed or current services, treatment or therapies, and of the alternatives.
4. The right to consent to or refuse any services, treatment, or therapy
upon full explanation of the expected consequences of such
consent or refusal. A parent or legal guardian may consent to or refuse any service,
treatment or therapy on behalf of a minor child.
5. The right to current, written, individualized service plan that
addresses one's own mental health, physical health, social economic
needs, and that specifies the provision of appropriate and adequate services, as
available, either directly or by referral.
6. The right to active and informed participation in the establishment, periodic review, and reassessment of the service plan.
7. The right to freedom from unnecessary or excessive medication.
8. The right to freedom from unnecessary restraint or seclusion.
9. The right to participate in any appropriate and available agency
service, regardless of refusal of one or more other services,
treatments, or therapies, or regardless of relapse from earlier treatment in that or
another service, unless there is a valid and
specific necessity which precludes and/or requires the client's participation in other
services. This necessity shall be explained
to the client and written in the client's current service plan
10. The right to be informed of and refuse any unusual or hazardous treatment procedures.
11. The right to be advised of and refuse observation by techniques such
as one-way vision mirrors, tape recorders, televisions,
movies or photographs.
12. The right to have the opportunity to consult with independent treatment specialists or legal counsel, at one's own expense.
13. The right to confidentiality of communications and of all personally
identifying information within the limitations and requirements
for disclosure of various funding and/or certifying sources, state and federal statutes,
unless release of information is specifically
authorized by the client or parent or legal guardian of a minor child or court-appointed
guardian of the person of an adult client
in accordance with rule 5122:2-3-11 of the Administrative Code.
14. The right to have access to one's own psychiatric, medical or other
treatment records, unless access to particular identified
items of information is specifically restricted for that individual client for clear
treatment reasons in the client's treatment plan.
"Clear Treatment Reasons" shall be understood to mean only severe emotional
damage to the client such that dangerous or
self-injurious behavior is an eminent risk. The person restricting the information
shall explain to the client and other persons
authorized by the client the factual information about the individual client that
necessitates the restriction. The restriction must
be renewed at least annually to retain validity. Any person authorized by the client
has unrestricted access to all information.
Clients shall be informed in writing of agency policies and procedures for viewing or
obtaining copies of person records.
15. The right to be informed in advance of the reason(s) for
discontinuance of service provision, and to be involved in planning
for the consequences of that event.
16. The right to receive an explanation of the reasons for denial of
service.
17. The right not to be discriminated against in the provision of service on the basis
of religion, race, color, creed, sex,
national origin, age, lifestyle, physical or mental handicap, developmental disability, or
inability to pay.
18. The right to know the cost of services.
19. The right to be fully informed of all rights.
20. The right to exercise any and all rights without reprisal in any form including
continued and uncompromised access
to service.
21. The right to file a grievance.
22. The right to have oral and written instructions for filling a grievance.