A mental health advanced directive (MHAD) is a document that declares a person's preferences regarding the person's mental health treatment in the event of a temporary period of incapacity due to a behavioral health disorder. Washington State's MHAD law passed in 2003, and was updated in 2021. An MHAD may include:
An MHAD must provide a person with a full range of choices, and be acknowledged before a notary public or signed by two witnesses who know the person and attest that the person does not appear to be acting under incapacity, fraud, undue influence, or duress. A mental health advanced directive may be revoked at any time except during a period of incapacity, unless the terms of the directive allow revocation during periods of incapacity.
A health care provider must act in accordance with the terms of an MHAD to the fullest extent possible, unless compliance would violate an accepted standard of care, the requested treatment is not available, or another exception applies. Liability protections apply to providers who provide treatment according to an MHAD. A standard form for a mental health advance directive is provided in state law.
The Health Care Authority (HCA) must convene a Mental Health Advance Directive Effective Implementation Work Group to develop recommendations concerning:
Deliverables for the work group include the development of training toolkits, program testing and data collection in two pilot locations, and a report to the Governor and relevant committees of the Legislature by December 1, 2023.
The membership of the work group must be representative of the diversity of individuals who use MHADs and behavioral health services and include representatives of 17 named constituencies.
PRO: Mental health is impacting our families, kids, and neighbors, especially after COVID. As a military member, it is important to understand PTSD and the mental health of our troops. This is a small bill with monumental return. A work group sponsored by the Mental Health Summit worked for the last 18 months to determine why MHADs are not widely in use, and what can be done to realize the potential of this policy as a means to bring self-determination into mental health care. We are working on a robust training toolkit and exploring the creation of a statewide repository for housing MHADs. The work group is necessary to mandate this work as a stakeholder community priority. Without this, MHADs will continue to be a well-intended law from 2003 with no path to broad utilization. We want to eliminate trial-and-error treatment and achieve better outcomes. Other states are watching this effort and Washington has the opportunity to lead. MHADs help treatment teams understand what has worked best in the past, what will work best in the future, and what the patient's wishes are. After 2003, there was a state registry that was defunded during the Great Recession. This puts back in place a robust structure. There are many technical needs to be worked out, including security and interoperability, so we need the work group. Please amend the bill to include NAMI Washington in the work group.