Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC...

52
Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup

Transcript of Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC...

Page 1: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV:

A Legal Guide for Clinicians

AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup

Page 2: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

This presentation was developed by the Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup, and its Legal Rights and Entitlements Subgroup, in collaboration with the AIDS Education and Training Centers National Resource Center (AETC NRC).

Page 3: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Subgroup Members David Korman, JD — Subgroup Leader

(Pennsylvania/MidAtlantic AETC) Vera Holmes, LCSW (FXB Center) Cathy Samples, MD, MPH (New England

AETC)

Subgroup Members from AETC NRC Megan Vanneman, MPH – Subgroup

Coordinator Supriya Modey, MPH, MBBS

Page 4: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

General consensus

Many adolescents will not seek medical care unless they are assured of confidential services.

Page 5: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Support for minors’ rights Legislation promoted in all states providing

confidential medical care for minors with respect to reproductive, sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and HIV/AIDS-related issues by:

-American Academy of Family Physicians

-American Academy of Pediatrics

-Society of Adolescent Medicine

-American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists

Page 6: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Laws vary from state to state

Laws pertaining to confidential medical treatment of minors vary tremendously state to state.

HIV testing and treatment often not specifically addressed.

Page 7: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

General medical rule: minors are without legal capacity

In general, minors* lack legal capacity to make

medical decisions.

Involvement of parent/guardian often required.

* (generally persons under the age of 18 years)

Page 8: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Typical statute

Any person who is eighteen years of age or older, or has graduated from high school, or has married, or has been pregnant, may give effective consent to medical, dental and health services for himself or herself, and the consent of no other person shall be necessary.

(Pennsylvania, 35 P.S. Sec. 10101)

Page 9: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Law provides for exceptions

“Non-confidentiality disincentive”= minors may not want to ask for treatment for sensitive matters if believe service not confidential.

Due to “non-confidentiality disincentive,” some exceptions to general rule of non-capacity of minors.

Page 10: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Situations where minors might have capacity:

Sexually transmitted infections Substance abuse Reproductive or contraceptive services Mental health interventions Married

Page 11: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

HIV may be specifically addressed

Some states— minors’ rights to confidential HIV testing and/or treatment specifically provided statutorily.

Others— unclear.

Page 12: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Different requirements in different states

Some states (with specific HIV-related statutes) designate age at which parental/guardian consent not needed (as low as 12 years; as high as 16).

Some states— depends upon clinical judgment of provider (assess minor’s maturity and ability to make rational choices).

Page 13: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Caveat

Especially in those states that follow “The Mature Minor Rule,” it is important for the clinician to document carefully: Minor’s maturity Reasons for non-disclosure to parent Minor’s understanding of situation Minor’s consent

Page 14: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Caution: some states provide for mandatory disclosure of positive test

Some states— minor may have right to HIV testing without parent/guardian consent, but positive test result must be disclosed to minor’s parent/guardian.

Page 15: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Dilemma

Informing minor of obligation to disclose positive test result to minor’s parents/guardians might dissuade testing.

Failure to inform minor of limit to confidentiality of test results is unlawful/unethical.

Page 16: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Testing vs. treatment

Most states that provide confidential testing of minors do not address issue of confidential treatment of minor who does not want his/her HIV status or treatment disclosed to parent/guardian.

Page 17: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Interpretation of other laws dealing with minors’ capacity to make medical decisions

Interpretation of other statutes pertaining to minors’ care (usually pertaining to STIs or substance abuse) crucial in states without specific HIV statute that addresses minors.

* Note: some states do not treat HIV as an STI.

Page 18: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Minor’s consent to treatment statutes

Many states— subscribe to “Minor’s Consent to Medical Treatment Acts.”

Acts typically provide circumstances under which minor may be tested or treated without parent/guardian consent.

Page 19: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Typical statute with expressed exceptions

Pennsylvania’s statute (fairly representative)

Any minor may give effective consent for medical and health services to determine thepresence of or to treat pregnancy, and venerealdisease and other diseases reportable under the act of April 23, 1956 (P.L. 1510), known as the "Disease Prevention and Control Law of 1955," and the consent of no other person shall be necessary.

Page 20: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Caveat to PA statute

PA law unsettled about minors’ right to consent until 2002, when HIV infection (as opposed to AIDS diagnosis) made reportable under Infection Control and Prevention Act.

Page 21: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

How to proceed?

Page 22: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Law of your forum

Is there a statute that deals specifically with minors and HIV?

Yes…

You are lucky, but read carefully …

No…

Does this situation fall within one of the commonly related issues (like STIs)?

Page 23: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Are the “exceptional” conditions met?

Is the patient old enough?

Is this a covered situation?

STI Substance abuse Reportable communicable disease Emancipation

Page 24: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Regardless of age or “exception” …determine if minor has capacity

Generally, minor has capacity if can:

1. Understand the situation.2. Explain reasons for decisions or

actions.3. Describe risks and benefits of

decision or action.

Page 25: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

If legal capacity is absent …

Determine who has authority for minor.

Usual default is parents (or custodial parent if only one parent available).

Is there a reason for parent(s) not to be involved (e.g., abuse, incest, neglect, absence)?

Is a non-parental guardian already established?

Page 26: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Listen to the adolescent

Usually helpful for young person to talk with parent or supportive adult regarding health care decisions.

Why is this minor hesitant?

(Note: the reason given may precipitate mandatory reporting under state law of abuse, etc.)

Page 27: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Mandatory reporting

Almost every state requires reporting sexual and physical abuse of minors.

Reporting abuse does not necessarily entail disclosure of HIV status. Take measures to mitigate risk of

disclosing HIV-related information.

Page 28: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Resources

Social Services— health care institutions and government

Legal department (e.g., appointment of a non-parental guardian for the child)

Page 29: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

If adolescent appears to have capacity …

Just for HIV testing? (e.g., but not treatment)

To whom does the test result have to be reported?

Minor should be advised of reporting requirements before testing.

Minor should be advised if legal capacity applies only to testing and not treatment.

Page 30: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Reporting for epidemiology

Almost all states require reporting newly discovered HIV infection—confidentially or anonymously (using unique identifiers)–whether the patient is minor or adult.

Collection of that information is for epidemiology only, not for law enforcement.

Important that patient understands this limited disclosure.

Page 31: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Institutional caveats to inadvertent disclosure

Who pays for testing and/or treatment?

Will reimbursement through insurer lead to disclosure?

Will mailings to patient be a risk for disclosure? (e.g., insurance company’s Explanation of Benefits)

Will phone calls to patient’s residence be a risk for disclosure?

Page 32: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Maintaining confidentiality of minor in treatment

Many times more difficult than just testing.

Almost always requires social service intervention (e.g., housing often a problem).

Page 33: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Case Study 1

14-year-old female presents with history of consensual unprotected vaginal sexual intercourse.

She wants to be tested for HIV. She indicates that her primary sexual partner is 22-years-old.

She does not want her parents, with whom she lives, to know about testing or her partner.

Page 34: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Issues

Can she be tested without parental notice or consent?

If she tests HIV-positive, who must be informed? What do we do next?

Whom, if anyone, must be advised of her activity with the partner?

Page 35: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Reflections: can she be tested without parental notice or consent?

Do my state’s laws:

Provide for testing without parental knowledge or consent?

Indicate appropriate age for sexual intercourse?

Have an STI or reportable disease exception?

Page 36: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Reflections: If she tests HIV-positive, who must be informed? What do we do next?

Almost certainly, HIV positive tests must be reported by name (but held in confidence) or unique identifier.

What does state law provide for contact/partner notification?

How do we handle treatment for her?

Page 37: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Notice to minor’s parents

State law might require notification of positive test result to parents/guardians even without minor’s consent.

Some states mandate parent notification, others permit parent notification, and others forbid it without the minor’s consent.

Page 38: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Reflections: Whom, if anyone, must be advised of her activity with the partner?

Is this a reportable incident?

Is this “statutory rape” or “sexual assault” even though “consensual” because she is:

(a) Under age of consent under state law?

(b) Her partner is much older than she?

Page 39: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

If reportable— to whom?

Law enforcement?

Child/Youth Services?

Parents?

If reportable— just the activity, or the HIV status as well?

Page 40: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Caution

The requirements of health care workers for reporting “sexual assaults,” “statutory rape,” “aiding in the delinquency of a minor,” “domestic violence,” “child abuse/neglect,” and the like vary tremendously from state to state.

Page 41: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Caution: states differ

In what they designate as a “reportable incident.”

In who they require to report (e.g., physician, administrator, nurse).

In whom must be notified (e.g., law enforcement, child protective services, parents).

In what must be reported (e.g., name of minor, name of alleged perpetrator, alleged acts).

Page 42: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Variation

How would your responses differ …

If the minor was homeless? If the minor was pregnant and in prenatal

care?

Page 43: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Case Study 2

14-year-old child in foster care.

Disclosed history of injection drug use.

Brought to clinic by county case worker.

Page 44: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Issues

Can the minor be tested?

What if the minor does not wish to tested?

Who obtains the results?

Page 45: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Reflections

Who has medical authority for child? Case worker? Foster parents? Biological parents?

Can 14-year-old minor be tested involuntarily? *May depend on importance of testing,

clinical picture, and/or invasiveness of test.

Page 46: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Reflections

Results may not automatically go to case worker, foster parents or to child services agency.

In some states, case worker or foster parents only obtain test results if: (a) they generally are authorized to obtain medical information for child; (b) they are in charge of child’s health; and (c) they need to know.

Page 47: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Bottom lines:

We must attempt to mitigate the disincentives to minors seeking testing.

Minor’s fear of disclosure to parents or others is significant disincentive.

“Instinctive” public policy in favor of parental notification and involvement often at odds with points 1 and 2.

Page 48: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Bottom lines (continued):

Probably disproportionate number of minors at risk for HIV infection, are not desirous of parental notification (compared to other potential medical conditions).

Involvement of supportive services is often advisable to assist in issues of abuse, housing, guardianship, etc.

Page 49: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Caveat

Confidential testing of at-risk minors has typically been practice, even in absence of explicit and unambiguous legal authority.

Public health organizations’ support of such testing (and treatment) may be increasingly under attack and vulnerable to judicial limitations (e.g., the changing judicial standards regarding reproductive/sexual privacy in several states).

Page 50: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Caveat

These issues are legally and ethically complicated. Document the patient’s understanding, consent, and concerns.

Legal answers vary tremendously from state to state.

Page 51: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Resources

Do not hesitate to utilize resources: Lawyers Ethicists Social Service Workers Adolescent Health Care Experts (Society for

Adolescent Medicine) State HIV/AIDS/STI Bureau

Page 52: Confidentiality of Testing and Treatment of Adolescents with HIV: A Legal Guide for Clinicians AETC Adolescent HIV/AIDS Workgroup.

Recognize there is no perfect answer, but work for the least harmful solution

Not incumbent upon you to finish the task, but neither are you free to absolve yourself from it.