Participant Guide - National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile
Transcription
Participant Guide - National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile
i Disclaimer The training materials contained herein are protected by US copyright laws and shall not be reproduced, stored in retrieval systems, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without prior written permission of the copyright holder. Permission is given to registered and authorized trainers to make localized adaptations wherein the publication requires such modifications. This permission does not extend to the making of copies for non-registered users or resale to third parties. All rights reserved. © 2014 Policy Research Incorporated. Models for Change Models for Change is an effort to create successful and replicable models of juvenile justice reform through targeted investments in key states, with core support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Models for Change seeks to accelerate progress toward a more effective, fair, and developmentally sound juvenile justice system that holds young people accountable for their actions, provides for their rehabilitation, protects them from harm, increases their life chances, and manages the risk they pose to themselves and to the public. The initiative is underway in Illinois, Pennsylvania, Louisiana, and Washington and, through action networks focusing on key issues, in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas, and Wisconsin. ii Contents Background & Overview of CIT for Youth .............................................................................................. v Course Outline ...................................................................................................................................... ix Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................................. xiii Unit One – Introduction and Overview Training Aids and Notes .................................................................................................................. 1 Unit Two – Understanding Adolescent Development Training Aids and Notes .................................................................................................................. 5 Materials ........................................................................................................................................21 References .....................................................................................................................................27 Unit Three – Adolescent Psychiatric Disorders & Treatment Training Aids and Notes ................................................................................................................29 Materials ........................................................................................................................................47 References .....................................................................................................................................51 Unit Four – Crisis Intervention & De-escalation Training Aids and Notes ................................................................................................................53 Materials ........................................................................................................................................65 Unit Five – The Family Experience Training Aids and Notes ................................................................................................................67 Unit Six – Legal Issues Training Aids and Notes ................................................................................................................71 Materials ........................................................................................................................................76 Unit Seven – Connecting to Resources Training Aids and Notes ................................................................................................................79 iii iv Background & Overview of CIT for Youth Introduction Youth with mental health problems often come in contact with law enforcement for disruptive or delinquent behavior that manifests as a result of an untreated or undetected mental health problem (Skowyra & Cocozza, 2007). Law enforcement officers responding to calls have latitude in determining how best to respond to the situation, and can decide whether the case proceeds into the juvenile justice system or whether the youth can be diverted (Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, 2004). Law enforcement officers on a CIT team typically undergo a 40-hour training in which they learn about mental illness, how it affects people in crisis, and how best to respond to crisis situations. This intensive training is coupled with the development of strong linkages with the mental health system to ensure that mental health resources are available to law enforcement officers when they respond to an individual in mental health crisis or in need of mental health services. The response by law enforcement officers to a call involving a youth in a mental health crisis, and the immediate decisions that are made about how to handle the case, can have a significant and profound impact on a youth and his/her family. This initial contact with law enforcement also represents an opportunity to connect the youth with emergency mental health services or refer the youth for mental health screening and evaluation (Skowyra & Cocozza, 2007). However, the ability of law enforcement to respond in this way requires that officers be appropriately trained to recognize the signs and symptoms of mental disorders among youth, and that resources be available so that officers have a place to take youth for immediate services. Since 1988, the CIT approach has rapidly proliferated across the country (Schwarzfeld, Reuland & Plotkin, 2008). Currently, there are at least 2,700 CIT programs in the nation (Cochran, 2014). Outcome studies of the CIT approach suggest that CIT may result in positive outcomes for both individuals with mental illness and the law enforcement officers who respond to calls involving those individuals, as well as for the larger criminal justice system and the community. Some studies have found that CIT decreased the need for more intensive and costly law enforcement responses, reduced officer injuries, and increased referrals to emergency health care (Dupont & Cochran, 2000). In addition, the partnerships that are created between the mental health system and law enforcement have been found to improve access to mental health services (Teller et al., 2006). The CIT Approach The CIT for Youth Training In 1988, recognizing the potential benefits of providing training about mental disorders and response techniques to law enforcement, the first Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) program was developed in Memphis, Tennessee. CIT is a law enforcement-based, crisis-response and diversion strategy in which specialized law enforcement officers who have received intensive training respond to calls involving individuals with possible mental health problems. While law enforcement officers are called to respond to incidents involving both adults and youth, the standard CIT training that is offered to most police officers focuses primarily on response techniques for adults. While there are some general similarities between adults and youth, there are important and unique distinctions between the two that require specialized knowledge and training. Youth-focused crisis training for law enforcement officers is especially v important given the large numbers of youth in contact with the juvenile justice system who have mental health problems. A study by the National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile Justice (NCMHJJ) confirmed that 65 to 70 percent of youth in contact with the juvenile justice system have a diagnosable mental health disorder. For 27 percent of justice-involved youth, their disorders are serious enough to require immediate mental health services (Shufelt & Cocozza, 2006). Recognizing the need for specialized law enforcement training that is focused exclusively on youth, the Models for Change Mental Health/ Juvenile Justice (MH/JJ) Action Network, supported by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, developed the Crisis Intervention Training for Youth (CIT-Y) curriculum. CIT-Y trains police officers on response techniques that are appropriate for youth with mental health needs. It is an eight-hour, supplemental training course for law enforcement officials who have previously undergone standard CIT training and who understand the basic principles and concepts of CIT, but who are looking for more specific information on youth. The CIT-Y is designed to be administered by a team of instructors with relevant subject matter expertise, experience, and regional specific knowledge. CIT-Y was developed in conjunction with three states participating in the MH/JJ Action Network: Colorado, Louisiana, and Pennsylvania. The development was overseen and coordinated by the NCMHJJ, in conjunction with the Colorado Regional Community Policing Institute.* The lead content developers include Don Kamin, Ph.D.; Stephen Phillippi, Ph.D., LCSW ; and Robert Kinscherff, Ph.D., J.D. *Additional advisors from Colorado include Sergeant Kevin Armstrong, Judith Brodie, Commander Joe Cassa, Linda Drager, Keri Fitzpatrick, John Patzman, and Elizabeth Sather, PsyD. vi About the Mental Health/Juvenile Justice Action Network The Models for Change MH/JJ Action Network was created through support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. The primary work of the Action Network occurred between years 2007 and 2011. It was a partnership of states working together to develop and implement new models and strategies for improving services and policies for youth with mental health needs involved with the juvenile justice system. Eight states comprised the MH/JJ Action Network: Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Louisiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Washington. For additional information about the MH/JJ Action Network, visit www. modelsforchange.net. About the National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile Justice The National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile Justice, which coordinates the MH/JJ Action Network, was established in 2001 to assist the field in developing improved policies and programs for youth with mental health disorders in contact with the juvenile justice system, based on the best available research and practice. The NCMHJJ is operated by Policy Research Associates, Inc. in Delmar, New York. For additional information about the NCMHJJ, visit www.ncmhjj.com. About the Mental Health and Juvenile Justice Collaborative for Change The NCMHJJ also coordinates the Mental Health and Juvenile Justice Collaborative for Change (Collaborative for Change), which is a resource center dedicated to sharing the innovations and resources that emerged from states involved with Models for Change and the MH/JJ Action Network, and actively supporting the adaptation, replication, and expansion of these innovations and resources throughout the country. The Collaborative for Change, which is supported by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, aims to serve juvenile justice and mental health system administrators, policy makers, program directors, and direct care staff by providing a wide array of information, technical assistance, and support services on key mental health and juvenile justice topics. For additional information about the Collaborative for Change, please visit: http://cfc.ncmhjj.com. References Cochran, S. (2014). University of Memphis CIT Center. Personal Communication, June 16, 2014. Dupont, R. & Cochran, S. (2000). Police response to mental health emergencies – Barriers to change. J. Am. Acad. Psychiatry Law, 28, 338-44. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. (2004). Statistical briefing book. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. Schwarzfeld, M., Reuland, M. & Plotkin, M. (2008). Improving responses to people with mental illnesses: The essential elements of a specialized law enforcement-based program. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Assistance. Shufelt, J. & Cocozza, J. (2006). Youth with mental health disorders in the juvenile justice system: Results from a multi-state prevalence study. Delmar, NY: National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile Justice. Skowyra, K. & Cocozza, J. (2007). Blueprint for change: A comprehensive model for the identification and treatment of youth with mental health needs in contact with the juvenile justice system. Delmar, NY: National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile Justice. Teller, J., Munetz, M., Gil, K. & Ritter, C. (2006). Crisis intervention team training for police officers responding to mental disturbance calls. Psych. Services, 57(2), 232-37. vii viii Course Outline Unit One – Introduction and Overview I. II. III. IV. V. Pre-course Assessment Introduction Objectives Ground Rules Overview of Day a. Purpose b. Goals Unit Two – Understanding Adolescent Development I. Objectives II. Defining Adolescence III. Adolescent Development a. Cognitive Development b. Moral Development i. Case Study (Tony) c. Social and Identity Development d. Physical Development i. Case Study (Henry) e. Brain Development IV. Differences between an Adolescent and an Adult a. Self-Control b. Short-Sightedness c. Susceptibility to Peer Pressure V. Important Considerations VI. Disruptions in Normal Development VII. Implications a. Purpose of Criminal Punishment b. Mitigation, Not Excuse Unit Three – Adolescent Psychiatric Disorders & Treatment I. II. III. IV. V. VI. Objectives National Mental Health Prevalence Data What are Mental Illnesses? Myths and Facts Signs of Mental Disorder in Youth Mental Disorders and Symptoms a. Disruptive Disorders ix i. Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder ii. Oppositional Defiant Disorder iii. Conduct Disorder b. Depressive (“Mood”) Disorders i. Depression 1. Adolescent Suicide 2. Other Self-Harming Behaviors ii. Bipolar Disorder c. Anxiety Disorders i. Generalized Anxiety Disorder ii. Panic Disorder iii. Separation Anxiety Disorder d. Trauma and Stressor-Related Disorders i. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder e. Psychotic/Thought Disorders f. Substance-Related Disorders i. Co-occurring Disorders g. Neurodevelopmental Disabilities i. Intellectual Disorders ii. Communication Disorders iii. Autism Spectrum Disorder VII. Treatment of Mental Disorders Unit Four – Crisis Intervention & De-escalation I. II. III. IV. V. Objectives Defining Crisis and Crisis Intervention Triggers for Adolescents Crisis State General Communication Guidelines a. Initial Approach b. Introduction c. Dialogue d. Connection e. Active Listening f. Reflecting g. Calming VI. Family VII. Additional Guidelines VIII. Responding to Specific Emotions/Situations a. Frustrated & Emotionally Distraught b. Hostile/Aggressive Behavior c. Substance-Induced Behavior d. Suicidal Thoughts and/or Behavior x IX. Mental Health Response Versus Criminal Arrest X. Demonstration of De-escalation Techniques Unit Five – The Family Experience I. II. III. IV. V. VI. The Family Experience a. What It’s Like Causes of Mental Illness Difficulties in Getting Help Why the Police A Parent’s Personal Experience Supporting Families Unit Six – Legal Issues I. Objectives II. Review of Federal Statutes a. HIPAA b. FERPA c. 42CFR Chapter 2 III. Obtaining Assessment/Treatment a. Voluntary b. Involuntary IV. Psychiatric Inpatient Admissions V. Potential Collateral Legal Consequences Unit Seven – Connecting to Resources I. Objectives II. Psychiatric Emergency Services III. Other (Non-psychiatric) Emergency Services IV. Outpatient Services V. School-based Services VI. Residential Treatment Facilities and Group Homes VII. Other Child/Youth & Family Services VIII. Mental Health Courts IX. Support Groups X. Responder Guide xi xii Acknowledgements The CIT-Y training curriculum was developed with support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and reflects the advice and contributions of many individuals: Developers: Don Kamin, Ph.D., Monroe County, New York, Office of Mental Health Stephen Phillippi, Ph.D., LCSW, Louisiana State University Health Science Center Robert Kinscherff, Ph.D., J.D., Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology The Mental Health/Juvenile Justice Action Network states participating in the Front-End Diversion Law Enforcement Workgroup, including: Colorado (Sandy Sayre, Colorado Regional Community Policing Institute) Louisiana (Sergeant Clifford Gatlin, Alexandria Police Department) Pennsylvania (Kristen DeComo, Allegheny County Department of Human Services) The National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile Justice, including: Kathleen R. Skowyra, Associate Director Joseph J. Cocozza, Director Kay S. Peavey, Project Associate Ashley Degnan, Project Assistant Jennifer Deschamps, Senior Administrative Assistant xiii xiv Training Aids Notes Slide 1-1 Slide 1-2 Slide 1-3 1 Training Aids Notes Slide 1-4 Slide 1-5 Slide 1-6 2 Training Aids Notes Slide 1-7 Slide 1-8 3 4 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-1 Slide 2-2 Slide 2-3 5 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-4 Slide 2-5 Slide 2-6 6 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-7 Slide 2-8 Slide 2-9 7 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-10 Slide 2-11 Slide 2-12 8 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-13 Slide 2-14 Slide 2-15 9 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-16 Slide 2-17 Slide 2-18 10 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-19 Slide 2-20 Slide 2-21 11 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-22 Slide 2-23 Slide 2-24 12 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-25 Slide 2-26 Slide 2-27 13 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-28 Slide 2-29 Slide 2-30 14 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-31 Slide 2-32 Slide 2-33 15 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-34 Slide 2-35 Slide 2-36 16 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-37 Slide 2-38 Slide 2-39 17 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-40 Slide 2-41 Slide 2-42 18 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-43 Slide 2-44 Slide 2-45 19 Training Aids Notes Slide 2-46 Slide 2-47 20 Materials Case Study: Tony Tony is a 16-year-old boy. His cousin robs a local convenience store and later asks Tony to hide him. Tony agrees and is subsequently charged with “Accessory After the Fact.” He is offered a plea deal, but only if he will testify against his cousin. Tony feels protective of his cousin. Tony also believes that the convenience store has been a front for drug dealing, which he thinks at least some local police officers know and have been “on the take” from the store owner. Tony’s mother tells him to “do the right thing, tell the truth” and to testify. His lawyer tells him to take the plea and let his cousin fend for himself. Tony’s older brother tells him to be loyal to his cousin and refuse the plea agreement. Tony worries that if he is perceived as a “snitch,” people might hurt him or his family. He resents that his cousin got him into this situation in the first place. 21 Materials Case Study: Henry Henry is a 15-year-old white male who is small for his age. His mother and aunt refer to him as their “little man.” Henry has few friends and has never played any type of organized sports or participated in clubs/organizations at school or in the community. Teachers report that Henry has a history of being aggressive toward other youth and teachers, and appears to be slower to understand school information than his classmates. Henry has been arrested in the past for theft and possession of marijuana. He’s on probation for those delinquent acts. When Henry went through the local Juvenile Assessment Center, testing showed that Henry had difficulty thinking about if-then and what-if situations. When asked about where he would like to be in two or three years, Henry stated, “I’m not sure; maybe going to school.” Henry stated that he took clothes from a local shopping mall because, “Everyone had jacked some really cool stuff and I was the only one that didn’t have anything. They said I was a momma’s boy. The only problem was I was the one stupid enough to get caught.” His response for smoking marijuana was, “I don’t know why everyone is freaking out and making a big deal out of this with me. Everyone does it.” Henry has very little contact with his father. His father has been in and out of jail since Henry was a year old and is currently serving time in another state. Henry’s mother has been in and out of jail herself for crimes such as possession of drugs and worthless check writing. Henry has lived with his grandmother, his aunt and/or his uncle when his mom was in jail. 22 Materials MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Adolescent Development and Juvenile Justice Issue Brief 3: Less Guilty by Reason of Adolescence In 2005, in a landmark decision, the U.S. Supreme Court outlawed the death penalty for offenders who were younger than 18 when they committed their crimes. The ruling centered on the issue of culpability, or criminal blameworthiness. Unlike competence, which concerns an individual’s ability to serve as a defendant during trial or adjudication, culpability turns on the offender’s state of mind at the time of the offense, including factors that would mitigate, or lessen, the degree of responsibility. The Court’s ruling, which cited the Network’s work, ran counter to a nationwide trend toward harsher sentences for juveniles. Over the preceding decade, as serious crime rose and public safety became a focus of concern, legislators in virtually every state had enacted laws lowering the age at which juveniles could be tried and punished as adults for a broad range of crimes. This and other changes have resulted in the trial of more than 200,000 youth in the adult criminal system each year.1 Proponents of the tougher laws argue that youth who have committed violent crimes need more than a slap on the wrist from a juvenile court. It is naïve, they say, to continue to rely on a juvenile system designed for a simpler era, when youth were getting into fistfights in the schoolyard; drugs, guns, and other serious crimes are adult offenses that demand adult punishment. Yet the premise of the juvenile justice system is that adolescents are different from adults, in ways that make them potentially less blameworthy than adults for their criminal acts. The legal system has long held that criminal punishment should be based not only on the harm caused, but also on the blameworthiness of the offender. How blameworthy a person is for a crime depends on the circumstances of the crime and of the person committing it. Traditionally, the courts have considered several categories of mitigating factors when determining a defendant’s culpability. These include: • impaired decision-making capacity, usually due to mental illness or disability, • the circumstances of the crime—for example, whether it was committed under duress, and • the individual’s personal character, which may suggest a low risk of continuing crime. Such factors don’t make a person exempt from punishment – rather, they indicate that the punishment should be less than it would be for others committing similar crimes, but under different circumstances. Should developmental immaturity be added to the list of mitigating factors? Should juveniles, in general, be treated more leniently than adults? A major study by the Research Network on Adolescent Development and Juvenile Justice now provides strong evidence that the answer is yes. 23 The Network’s Study of Juvenile Culpability The study of juvenile culpability was designed to provide scientific data on whether, in what ways, and at what ages adolescents differ from adults. Many studies have shown that by the age of sixteen, adolescents’ cognitive abilities – loosely, their intelligence or ability to reason – closely mirror that of adults. But how people reason is only one influence on how they make decisions. In the real world, especially in high-pressure crime situations, judgments are made in the heat of the moment, often in the company of peers. In these situations, adolescents’ other common traits – their short-sightedness, their impulsivity, their susceptibility to peer influence – can quickly undermine their decision-making capacity. The investigators looked at age differences in a number of characteristics that are believed to undergird decision-making and that are relevant to mitigation, such as impulsivity and risk processing, future orientation, sensation-seeking and resistance to peer pressure. These characteristics are also thought to change over the course of adolescence and to be linked to brain maturation during this time. The subjects – close to 1,000 individuals between the ages of 10 and 30 – were drawn from the general population in five regions. They were ethnically and socioeconomically diverse. The study’s findings showed several characteristics of adolescence that are relevant to determinations of criminal culpability. As the accompanying figure indicates, although intellectual abilities stop maturing around age 16, psychosocial capability continues to develop well into early adulthood. Short-Sighted Decision-Making One important element of mature decision-making is a sense of the future consequences of an act. A variety of studies in which adolescents and adults are asked to envision themselves in the future have found that adults project their visions over a significantly longer time, suggesting much greater future orientation. These findings are supported by data from the Network’s culpability study. Adolescents characterized themselves as less likely to consider the future consequences of their actions than did adults. And when subjects in the study were presented with various choices measuring their preference for smaller, immediate rewards versus larger, longer-term rewards (for example, “Would you rather have $100 today or $1,000 a year from now?”), adolescents had a lower “tipping point” – the amount of money they would take to get it immediately as opposed to waiting. How might these characteristics carry over into the real world? When weighing the long-term consequences of a crime, adolescents may simply be unable to see far enough into the future to make a good decision. Their lack of foresight, along with their tendency to pay more attention to immediate gratification than to long-term consequences, are among the factors that may lead them to make bad decisions. 24 Poor Impulse Control The Network’s study also found that as individuals age, they become less impulsive and less likely to seek thrills; in fact, gains in these aspects of self-control continue well into early adulthood. This was evident in individuals’ descriptions of themselves and on tasks designed to measure impulse control. On the “Tower of London” task, for example – where the goal is to solve a puzzle in as few moves as possible, with a wrong move requiring extra moves to undo it – adolescents took less time to consider their first move, jumping the gun before planning ahead. Network research also suggests that adolescents are both less sensitive to risk and more sensitive to rewards—an attitude than can lead to greater risk-taking. The new data confirm and expand on earlier studies gauging attitudes toward risk, which found that adults spontaneously mention more potential risks than teens. Juveniles’ tendency to pay more attention to the potential benefits of a risky decision than to its likely costs may contribute to their impulsivity in crime situations. Vulnerability to Peer Pressure The law does not require exceptional bravery of citizens in the face of threats or other duress. A person who robs a bank with a gun in his back is not as blameworthy as another who willingly robs a bank; coercion and distress are mitigating factors. Adolescents, too, face coercion, but of a different sort. Pressure from peers is keenly felt by teens. Peer influence can affect youth’s decisions directly, as when adolescents are coerced to take risks they might otherwise avoid. More indirectly, youth’s desire for peer approval, or their fear of rejection, may lead them to do things they might not otherwise do. In the Network’s culpability study, individuals’ reports of their vulnerability to peer pressure declined over the course of adolescence and young adulthood. Other Network research now underway is examining how adolescent risk-taking is “activated” by the presence of peers or by emotional arousal. For example, an earlier Network study, involving a computer car-driving task, showed that the mere presence of friends increased risk-taking in adolescents and college undergraduates, though not adults.2 Although not every teen succumbs to peer pressures, some youth face more coercive situations than others. Many of those in the juvenile justice system live in tough neighborhoods, where losing face can be not only humiliating but dangerous. Capitulating in the face of a challenge can be a sign of weakness, inviting attack and continued persecution. To the extent that coercion or duress is a mitigating factor, the situations in which many juvenile crimes are committed should lessen their culpability. Confirmation from Brain Studies Recent findings from neuroscience line up well with the Network’s psychosocial research, showing that brain maturation is a process that continues through adolescence and into early adulthood. For example, there is good evidence that the brain systems that govern impulse control, planning, and thinking ahead are still developing well beyond age 18. There are also several studies indicating that the systems governing reward sensitivity are “amped up” at puberty, which would lead to an increase in sensationseeking and in valuing benefits over risks. And there is emerging evidence that the brain systems that govern the processing of emotional and social information are affected by the hormonal changes of puberty in ways that make people more sensitive to the reactions of those around them – and thus more susceptible to the influence of peers.3 25 Policy Implications: A Separate System for Young Offenders The scientific arguments do not say that adolescents cannot distinguish right from wrong, nor that they should be exempt from punishment. Rather, they point to the need to consider the developmental stage of adolescence as a mitigating factor when juveniles are facing criminal prosecution. The same factors that make youth ineligible to vote or to serve on a jury require us to treat them differently from adults when they commit crimes. Some have argued that courts ought to assess defendants’ maturity on a case-by-case basis, pointing to the fact that older adolescents, in particular, vary in their capacity for mature decision-making. But the tools needed to measure psychosocial maturity on an individual basis are not well developed, nor is it possible to distinguish reliably between mature and immature adolescents on the basis of brain images. Consequently, assessing maturity on an individual basis, as we do with other mitigating factors, is likely to produce many errors. However, the maturing process follows a similar pattern across virtually all teenagers. Therefore it is both logical and efficient to treat adolescents as a special legal category – and to refer the vast majority of offenders under the age of 18 to juvenile court, where they will be treated as responsible but less blameworthy, and where they will receive less punishment and more rehabilitation and treatment than typical adult offenders. The juvenile system does not excuse youth of their crimes; rather, it acknowledges the development stage and its role in the crimes committed, and punishes appropriately. At the same time, any legal regime must pay attention to legitimate concerns about public safety. There will always be some youth – such as older, violent recidivists – who have exhausted the resources and patience of the juvenile justice system, and whose danger to the community warrants adjudication in criminal court. But these represent only a very small percentage of juvenile offenders. Trying and punishing youth as adults is an option that should be used sparingly. Legislatures in several states have begun to reconsider the punitive laws enacted in recent decades. They have already recognized that prosecuting and punishing juveniles as adults carries high costs, for the youth and for their communities. Now we can offer lawmakers in all states a large body of research on which to build a more just and effective juvenile justice system. 1 Allard, P., & Young, M. (2002). Prosecuting juveniles in adult court: Perspectives for policymakers and practitioners. Journal of Forensic Psychology Practice, 6, 65-78. 2 Gardner, M., & Steinberg, L. (2005). Peer influence on risk-taking, risk preference, and risky decision-making in adolescence and adulthood: An experimental study. Developmental Psychology, 41, 625-635. 3 Nelson, E., Leibenluft, E., McClure, E., & Pine, D. (2005). The social re-orientation of adolescence: A neuroscience perspective on the process and its relation to psychopathology. Psychological Medicine, 35, 163-174. For More Information MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Adolescent Development and Juvenile Justice Temple University, Department of Psychology Philadelphia, PA 19122 www.adjj.org The Research Network on Adolescent Development and Juvenile Justice is an interdisciplinary, multi-institutional program focused on building a foundation of sound science and legal scholarship to support reform of the juvenile justice system. The network conducts research, disseminates the resulting knowledge to professionals and the public, and works to improve decision-making and to prepare the way for the next generation of juvenile justice reform. 26 References Chedd-Angier Production Company. (2013). Peer influence and adolescent behavior. Brains on Trial with Alan Alda: Deciding Punishment. Available at http://brainsontrial.com/watch-ideos/video/episode2-deciding-punishment/ Chedd-Angier Production Company. (2013). What fMRI scans tell us about the adolescent brain. Brains on Trial with Alan Alda: Deciding Punishment. Available at http://brainsontrial.com/watchvideos/video/episode-2-deciding-punishment/ Craig, G. J. (1999). Human development. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. CSR, Inc. (1997). Understanding youth development: Promoting positive pathways of growth. Washington, D.C.: Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, Administration on Children, Youth and Families, Families and Youth Services Bureau. Daeg de Mott, D. K. (1998). Moral development. Gale Encyclopedia of Childhood and Adolescence. Gale Research. Frontline. (2002). The wiring of the adolescent brain. Inside the Teenage Brain. Available at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/video/flv/generic.html?s=frol02sfa9q392&continuous=1 Gardner, M. & Steinberg, L. (2005). Peer influence on risk-taking, risk preference, and risky decisionmaking in adolescence and adulthood: An experimental study. Developmental Psychology, 41, 625635. MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Adolescent Development & Juvenile Justice (2006). Less guilty by reason of adolescence. Issue Brief 3. Chicago, IL: John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Seifert, K. L. & Hoffnung, R. J. (1994). Child and adolescent development, Third Ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. Steinberg, L. (2007). Senate judiciary committee briefing. June 11, 2007. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Senate. Steinberg, L. (2008). Development & criminal blameworthiness: Bringing research to policy & practice. MacArthur Foundation Models for Change Annual Conference. December 9, 2008. Washington, D.C. Steinberg, L. (2009). Should the science of adolescent brain development inform public policy? American Psychologist, 64, 739-750. Steinberg, L., Albert, D., Cauffman, E., Banich, M., Graham, S. & Woolard, J. (2008). Age differences in sensation seeking and impulsivity as indexed by behavior and self-report: Evidence for a dual systems model. Developmental Psychology, 44, 1764-1778. Steinberg, L., Graham, S., O’Brien, L., Woolard, J., Cauffman, E. & Banich, M. (2009). Age differences in future orientation and delay discounting. Child Development, 80, 28-44. Steinberg, L. & Monahan, K. (2007). Age differences in resistance to peer influence. Developmental Psychology, 43, 1531-1543. 27 Supreme Court of the United States. (2012). Miller v. Alabama. 567 U.S. ___ Van Hasselt, V. B. & Hersen, M. (1987). Handbook of adolescent psychology. New York: Pergamon Press. Vasta, R., Haith, M. M. & Miller, S. A. (1995). Child psychology: The modern science, Second Ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. White, B. (1999). Understanding adolescent behavior: Knowledge, skills, & interventions. Trainer’s Manual. Louisiana State University in Shreveport. Division of Continuing Education and Public Service 28 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-1 Slide 3-2 Slide 3-3 29 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-4 Slide 3-5 Slide 3-6 30 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-7 Slide 3-8 Slide 3-9 31 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-10 Slide 3-11 Slide 3-12 32 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-13 Slide 3-14 Slide 3-15 33 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-16 Slide 3-17 Slide 3-18 34 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-19 Slide 3-20 Slide 3-21 35 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-22 Slide 3-23 Slide 3-24 36 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-25 Slide 3-26 Slide 3-27 37 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-28 Slide 3-29 Slide 3-30 38 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-31 Slide 3-32 Slide 3-33 39 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-34 Slide 3-35 Slide 3-36 40 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-37 Slide 3-38 Slide 3-39 41 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-40 Slide 3-41 Slide 3-42 42 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-43 Slide 3-44 Slide 3-45 43 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-46 Slide 3-47 Slide 3-48 44 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-49 Slide 3-50 Slide 3-51 45 Training Aids Notes Slide 3-52 46 Materials Myths & Facts Myth 1: All youth in the juvenile justice system are mentally ill. Facts: • 65 percent to 70 percent of youth in juvenile correctional facilities have a mental health disorder. • About 50 percent of youth in juvenile correctional facilities are in need of special education classes. • Mental health disorders may be significantly different than behavioral disorders. Myth 2: All mental health disorders cause criminal behavior. Facts: • Mental health disorders may or may not be associated with criminal/delinquent offenses. For example, research shows that substance use introduces people to different types of crime, but doesn’t necessarily cause the crime. • Mental health disorders and delinquent behaviors may be related, but are not necessarily causative. The disorder, if undetected or untreated, can manifest in behaviors that could bring a youth to the attention of law enforcement. • Mental health disorders may be genetic or environmental in nature. Myth 3: Family members of youth with mental health disorders are resistant to treatment. Facts: • Family members often feel disconnected from treatment (or even blamed), especially in juvenile detention and secure care settings. • Many evidence-based practices focus on taking the blame off of any one person in a family and refocus attention so that problems (mental illness included) are an issue for everyone in the family to address and everyone can be part of the solution. • Family members may assist in transitioning youth back into the community after an offense has been committed (youth need support and resources to sustain change). For example, when there is a smooth transition from detention or institutional care to the community, treatment is more effective and can continue to help the child beyond confinement. 47 Myth 4: Mental health disorders and mental retardation are identical. Facts: • Mental retardation is a separate and distinct set of disorders affecting intelligence and educational abilities. • Mental health disorders are complex, affecting thinking, perception, mood and behaviors. Myth 5: Mental health programming and treatment does not work with delinquent youth who have mental health disorders. Facts: • Certain treatments have been shown to be effective. • Interventions that are designed to work with youth in the context of their environment (family, home, peer, school, work, neighborhood) have been found to be more effective than traditional office-based or institutional interventions. • Treatments that focus on teaching skills and reinforcing youth and family as they utilize those skills in the “real world” are more effective than educational programs or interventions that only allow youth to demonstrate skills in a controlled environment (e.g., office or institution). Myth 6: Mental health screening should be provided to a limited number of youth who enter the juvenile justice system. Facts: • All youth entering the juvenile justice system should be screened for mental health and other related issues. • Screening and assessing youth assist in developing effective treatment planning. Myth 7: The Americans with Disabilities Act does not apply to mentally ill youth being disciplined in juvenile justice settings for violating the law. Facts: • Accommodations must be made for youth with mental health disabilities. • Youth need to be held accountable for their actions, but should not be punished for a symptom of their mental illness (they should be treated). 48 Materials Medication Information Sheet Brand Generic Name Indication Common Side Effects Abilify Aripiprazole Antipsychotic Nausea, headache, dizziness, insomnia, anxiety Adderall Adderall XR Dextroamphetamine/ amphetamine Stimulant (for ADHD) Difficulty sleeping, feeling irritable or restless, dry mouth, dizziness, loss of appetite, headache, feeling shaky, nausea Ambien Zolpidem Sedative Drowsiness, dizziness, difficulty with coordination, headache, nausea Anafranil Clomipramine Antidepressant Dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, sedation, dizziness Antabuse Disulfiram Alcoholism Drowsiness, headache, “metallic” taste Asendin Amoxapine Antidepressant Dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, sedation, dizziness, stiffness Ativan Lorazepam Antianxiety Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss BuSpar Buspirone Antianxiety Drowsiness, dizziness, dry mouth, headache, nausea, fatigue Catapres Clonidine Impulsive/aggressive behaviors Drowsiness, dizziness, dry mouth, headache, weakness, constipation Campral Acamprosate Alcoholism Dizziness, headache, nausea, tremor, diarrhea, insomnia, sweating Celexa Citalopram Antidepressant Nausea, nervousness, drowsiness, headache, change in appetite Cymbalta Duloxetine Antidepressant Nausea, dry mouth, constipation, dizziness, drowsiness Clozapine Clozapine Antipsychotic Sedation, increased salivation, constipation, increased appetite, low blood pressure (Seizures may occur at high doses) Dalmane Flurazepam Sedative Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss Depakote Depakene Valproate, valproic acid, divalproex Mood Stabilizer (Antimanic) Nausea, vomiting, sedation, increased appetite Desyrel Trazodone Antidepressant Sedation, dizziness, dry mouth, blurred vision, headache Dexedrine Dextroamphetamine Stimulant (for ADHD) Difficulty sleeping, feeling irritable or restless, dry mouth, dizziness, loss of appetite, headache, feeling shaky, nausea Effexor Effexor XR Venlafaxine Antidepressant Headache, dry mouth, nausea, constipation, drowsiness, nervousness, trouble sleeping Elavil Amitriptyline Antidepressant Dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, sedation, dizziness Eskalith CR Lithobid Lithotab Lithonate Lithium Carbonate Mood Stabilizer (Antimanic) Nausea, shakiness and tremor, dry mouth, diarrhea, drowsiness, increased thirst, increased urination With overdose: confusion, slurred speech, seizures, muscle twitching, severe vomiting, coma and death Geodon Ziprasidone Antipsychotic Sedation, restlessness, dizziness, constipation, nausea, tremor Halcion Triazolam Sedative Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss Haldol Haloperidol Antipsychotic Stiffness, shakiness, unusual muscle movements, sedation, dry mouth, blurred vision Invega Paliperidone Antipsychotic Sedation, restlessness, dizziness, nausea, headache Klonopin Clonazepam Antianxiety, anti-seizure Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss Lamictal Lamotrigine Mood Stabilizer, anti-seizure Dizziness, nausea, diarrhea, headache, blurred vision, drowsiness, incoordination Lexapro Escitalopram Antdepressant Sedation, nausea, diarrhea, sweating, dizziness Librium Chlordiazepoxide Antianxiety Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss Loxitane Loxapine Antipsychotic Stiffness, shakiness, unusual muscle movements, sedation, dry mouth, blurred vision Luvox Fluvoxamine Antidepressant Nausea, nervousness, drowsiness, headache, change in appetite Mellaril Thioridazine Antipsychotic Stiffness, shakiness, unusual muscle movements, sedation, dry mouth, blurred vision 49 Brand Generic Name Indication Common Side Effects Moban Molindone Antipsychotic Stiffness, shakiness, unusual muscle movements, sedation, dry mouth, blurred vision Nardil Phenelzine Antidepressant Dizziness, dry mouth, nausea, shakiness, blurred vision, increased appetite, difficulty sleeping Navane Thiothixene Antipsychotic Stiffness, shakiness, unusual muscle movements, sedation, dry mouth, blurred vision Neurontin Gabapentin Antianxiety, nerve pain Dizziness, fatigue, incoordination, drowsiness, tremor Norpramin Desipramine Antidepressant Dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, sedation, dizziness Pamelor Nortriptyline Antidepressant Dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, sedation, dizziness Paxil Paroxetine Antidepressant Nausea, nervousness, drowsiness, headache, change in appetite Prolixin Fluphenazine Antipsychotic Stiffness, shakiness, unusual muscle movements, sedation, dry mouth, blurred vision Prozac Fluoxetine Antidepressant Nausea, nervousness, drowsiness, headache, change in appetite Remeron Mirtazapine Antidepressant Sedation, increased appetite, dizziness, nausea, dry mouth, constipation, impaired motor skills Restoril Temazepam Sedative Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss ReVia Naltrexone Alcoholism Nausea, vomiting, nervousness, dizziness, anxiety, insomnia Risperdal Risperidone Antipsychotic Insomnia, anxiety, constipation, some stiffness at higher doses Ritalin Concerta Methylphenidate Stimulant (for ADHD) Difficulty sleeping, feeling irritable or restless, dry mouth, dizziness, loss of appetite, headache, feeling shaky, nausea Serax Oxazepam Antianxiety Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss Seroquel Quetiapine Antipsychotic Sedation, dizziness, constipation, dry mouth, low blood pressure Serzone Nefazodone Antidepressant Dizziness, drowsiness, dry mouth, nausea, constipation, weakness Sinequan Doxepin Antidepressant Dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, sedation, dizziness Strattera Atomoxetine For ADHD Constipation or diarrhea, dizziness, dry mouth, headache, nausea Stelazine Trifluoperazine Antipsychotic Stiffness, shakiness, unusual muscle movements, sedation, dry mouth, blurred vision Symbyax Fluoxetine/Olanzapine Bipolar depression Drowsiness, dizziness, headache, dry mouth, increased appetite Tegretol Carbamazepine Mood Stabilizer (Antimanic) Dizziness or lightheadedness, clumsiness or unsteadiness, nausea, weakness, blurred or double vision, drowsiness Tenex Guanfacine Impulsive/aggressive behaviors Drowsiness, dizziness, dry mouth, headache, weakness, constipation Thorazine Chlorpromazine Antipsychotic Stiffness, shakiness, unusual muscle movements, sedation, dry mouth, blurred vision Tofranil Imipramine Antidepressant Dry mouth, blurred vision, constipation, sedation, dizziness Tranxene Clorazepate Antianxiety Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss Trilafon Perphenazine Antipsychotic Stiffness, shakiness, unusual muscle movements, sedation, dry mouth, blurred vision Trileptal Oxcarbazepine Mood stabilizer Dizziness, nausea, tremor, headache, blurred vision, unsteady gait Valium Diazepam Antianxiety Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss Wellbutrin SR/XL Bupropion Antidepressant Anxiety, trouble sleeping, dry mouth, loss of appetite, headache, constipation, shakiness Xanax Alprazolam Antianxiety Drowsiness, dizziness, slurred speech, difficulty with coordination, memory loss Zoloft Sertraline Antidepressant Nausea, nervousness, drowsiness, headache, change in appetite Zyprexa Olanzapine Antipsychotic Sedation, constipation, increased appetite, dizziness, tremor 04/08 – Commonly Used Psychotropics, prepared by Sue Hahn, Pharm.D., Mental Health Center of Denver. 50 References Abrantes, A.M., Hoffman, N.G., Anton, R. & Estroff, T.W. (2004). Identifying co-occurring disorders among juvenile justice populations. Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice, 2(4), 329-341. American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.). Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Publishing. Brown, S., Gleghorn, A., Schuckit, M. & Mott, M. (1996). Conduct disorder among adolescent alcohol and drug abusers. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 57(3), 314–324. Grant, B., Stinson, F. & Harford T. (2001). Age at onset of alcohol use and DSM-IV alcohol abuse and dependence: A 12-year follow-up. Journal of Substance Abuse, 13(4), 493-504. McMahon, R.J., Wells, K.C. & Kotter, J.S. (2006). Conduct problems. In E.J. Marsh & R.A. Barkley (Eds.), Treatment of childhood disorders (3rd ed., pp. 137-268). New York: Guilford Press. National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention: Youth in Contact with the Juvenile Justice System Task Force. (2013). Need to know: A fact sheet series on juvenile suicide – Juvenile court judges and staff. Washington, DC: Author. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. (2014). Statistical briefing book. Available at http://www.ojjdp.gov/ojstatbb/crime/qa05101.asp?qaDate=2011&text= Saluja, G., Lachan, R., Scheidt, P. Overpeck, M., Sun, W. & Giedd, J. (2004). Prevalence of and risk factors for depressive symptoms among young adolescents. Arch Pediatr Adolesc. 158: 760-765. Shufelt, J. & Cocozza, J. (2006). Youth with mental health disorders in the juvenile justice system: Results from a multi-state prevalence study. Delmar, NY: National Center for Mental Health and Justice. Snyder, H.N. & Sickmund, M. (2006). Juvenile offenders and victims: 2006 national report. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. Teplin, L., Abram, K., McClelland, G., Mericle, A., Dulcan, M. & Washburn, J.J. (2006). Psychiatric disorders of youth in detention. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. Available at http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ojjdp/210331.pdf 51 52 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-1 Slide 4-2 Slide 4-3 53 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-4 Slide 4-5 Slide 4-6 54 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-7 Slide 4-8 Slide 4-9 55 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-10 Slide 4-11 Slide 4-12 56 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-13 Slide 4-14 Slide 4-15 57 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-16 Slide 4-17 Slide 4-18 58 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-19 Slide 4-20 Slide 4-21 59 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-22 Slide 4-23 Slide 4-24 60 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-25 Slide 4-26 Slide 4-27 61 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-28 Slide 4-29 Slide 4-30 62 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-31 Slide 4-32 Slide 4-33 63 Training Aids Notes Slide 4-34 64 Materials Case Studies . Case Study #1 You are assigned to a school. You have been contacted by a student running down the hall who states that the teacher is crying and Debra is out of control in the classroom. You respond to the classroom and find the teacher sobbing at her desk while Debra, a 13-year-old student, is standing on the chair at her desk screaming that the teacher was involved in a porn movie and that the students are all actors. Debra screams that no one is real and they must all stop talking. Someone has broken the cubbies in the room and papers, boots, and backpacks are strewn about the area. The kids in the classroom have mixed reactions: some are fearful, some are laughing, and some are quietly watching. Two girls are trying to get out of the room by sliding along the wall while Debra’s back is turned. Useful Information • Debra is known to be on some kind of medication. • Debra has been transferred twice in the district due to disruptive behavior. • Debra’s parents have filed a suit against the school, believing that their daughter has been mistreated by school personnel and the School Resource Officer (SRO). • The teacher has a history of depression which she shared with you during a disturbance in her class last year. • The principal has been notified and is expected to respond, however she has not arrived yet. • The former SRO was criticized in the past by school staff and parents for being “too aggressive” in a crisis situation which was investigated and founded. You are newly assigned to this school. General Questions 1. What is your first priority? 2. How do you approach the room? 3. What kind of communication will be most effective with each of the identified parties? 4. What kind of resources might you offer? (continued on next page) 65 Case Study #2 A call comes in through dispatch that a large group of kids is hanging out at a vacant convenience store parking lot. The reporting party stated the kids are loud and that they are of all ages and all sizes. The caller is sure they are doing drugs and other things that are horrible. The caller became upset when she reported that she also heard someone, probably a girl, screaming. The caller is sure the girl was being hurt – maybe even raped. When you arrive on the scene, you observe a group of boys standing around a car and rocking it. They are shouting or chanting and there is a trick bicycle lying on the ground near the car. You can’t see into the car, and when you approach the scene, a girl on a bench starts screaming that you arrived too late. One small boy watches you intently and seems to want to talk to you. Another female, perhaps age 14 or 15, is walking in circles and asking for help from “my god.” Useful Information • This parking lot is known for drug sales and gang involvement. A local gang who engages in its own interpretation of “voodoo” practices has recently been tagging the area. • The girl praying has a history of running away; she has been found several times lying down on the railroad tracks. One officer recognizes her upon arrival. • The boy seems fearful and appears glued to the bench, yet his eyes follow you and he seems to be mouthing something you can’t hear from your current position. General Questions 1. What is your first priority? 2. How do you approach the car? 3. What kind of communication will be most effective with each of the identified parties? 4. What kind of resources might you offer? 5. What, if any, difference might it make in this crisis-response situation if the youth involved are of recent Caribbean origin and have maintained a tradition of voodoo practice? What might an officer want to know in advance about this tradition and practice or how the youth have implemented their own “interpretation” of this traditional practice? 66 Training Aids Notes Slide 5-1 Slide 5-2 Slide 5-3 67 Training Aids Notes Slide 5-4 Slide 5-5 Slide 5-6 68 Training Aids Notes Slide 5-7 Slide 5-8 Slide 5-9 69 Training Aids Notes Slide 5-10 70 Training Aids Notes Slide 6-1 Slide 6-2 Slide 6-3 71 Training Aids Notes Slide 6-4 Slide 6-5 Slide 6-6 72 Training Aids Notes Slide 6-7 Slide 6-8 Slide 6-9 73 Training Aids Notes Slide 6-10 Slide 6-11 Slide 6-12 74 Training Aids Notes Slide 6-13 Slide 6-14 75 Materials U.S. Department of Justice HIPAA Fact Sheet What Law Enforcement Officers “Need To Know” about the Federal Medical Records Privacy Regulation and Access to “Protected Health Information” • Since April 14, 2003, a federal regulation gives federal privacy protections to medical records (45 Code of Federal Regulations – Parts 160 & 164). • The regulation places legal obligations on doctors, hospitals, pharmacies, insurance companies, etc., governing their ability to disclose medical information about a suspect or victim and may, in some situations, prevent them from giving such information. • This FACT SHEET will help law enforcement officers understand how to obtain personal medical evidence needed for investigations, within the bounds of federal law. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA): Standards for Confidentiality of Individually Identifiable Health Information (HIPAA Privacy Rule) • HIPAA’s “Standards for Confidentiality of Individually Identifiable Health Information” governs how and when a “Covered Entity” can use or disclose “individually identifiable health (medical) information (in whatever form) concerning an individual person (in HIPAA terminology: “protected health information”). • There are three types of Covered Entities under HIPAA: (1) health plans: group and individual health insurance, HMOs, Medicare, Medicaid and other government health plans; (2) health care clearinghouses: billing services and providers; (3) health care providers: doctors, nurses, paramedics and other emergency services personnel; hospitals and clinics; pharmacies (see 45 CFR 160.103). A fourth type of covered entity included Medicare prescription drug discount card sponsors. • Protected health information is “individually identifiable health information” which is transmitted by electronic media, or maintained in any electronic medium (defined at 45 CFR 162.103), or transmitted or maintained in any other form or medium (essentially all health records identifiable by a patient name or other personal identifier – such as a Social Security number – is protected health information). • As a general rule, Covered Entities may not use or disclose protected health information unless permitted by a provision of the rules, such as the: • • • • patient provides written authorization (permission) for the disclosure, or disclosure is for a health oversight purpose, or disclosure is for a certain law enforcement purpose (see next page), or disclosure is otherwise required by law, e.g., statute, subpoena, court order. • The behavior of government agencies that are not covered entities (e.g., law enforcement) is not regulated by the HIPAA Privacy Rule, but when law enforcement agencies seek protected health information from covered entities, the rules will dictate how the covered entities respond to law enforcement requests for protected health information. 76 The HIPAA Privacy Rule provides “law enforcement exceptions” to the requirement that patients authorize a Covered Entity’s disclosure of their protected health information. So, if a Covered Entity or a person speaking on behalf of a Covered Entity, says: “Sorry, officer, I can’t give you that information because of the HIPAA privacy regulations...” or “the patient didn’t authorize this disclosure...”, you can respond with one of the following responses, IF it applies...“Yes, [Covered Entity], you can give me the information I need because [one of the following law enforcement exceptions applies]...” 1. Required by law [45 CFR 164.512(f)(1)(i)]. “The laws of this State require reporting of [certain types of wounds or other physical injuries...] to law enforcement agencies...” 2. Court order, or warrant, subpoena or summons issued by a judicial officer [45 CFR 164.512(f)(1)(ii)(A)]. “I am serving a court-ordered subpoena on you, so you can (and must) produce the medical records I am seeking.” 3. Grand jury subpoena [45 CFR 164.512(f)(1)(ii)(B)]. “I am serving a grand jury subpoena on you, so you can (and must) produce the medical records that I seek.” 4. Administrative subpoena or request, but only if three specific requirements are met [45 CFR 164.512(f)(1)(ii)(C)]. “Because I am serving an administrative subpoena on you, and I certify that the subpoena meets the three-part test... (1) the information sought is material to a legitimate law enforcement inquiry; (2) the request is specific and limited in scope to the purpose for which it is being sought; and (3) de-identified information could not reasonably be used (i.e., without SSN or name, the information would be useless as evidence). 5. Locate or identify [45 CFR 164.512(f)(2). “I am trying to locate OR identify a suspect... fugitive...material witness...OR a missing person.” This exception will permit access to eight types of individually identifiable information (but excludes DNA, dental records, body fluid, or tissue, which would require a subpoena). 6. Information about a victim of a crime [45 CFR 164.512(f)(3). “I need this information about this person, who is or I suspect is a victim of a crime...or to determine if someone else committed a crime...that cannot be delayed until the victim approves the disclosure...” 7. Crime on premises [45 CFR 164.512(f)(5)]. “The [covered entity] believes that the information is evidence of a crime that occurred on the premises” (e.g. a nursing home, hospital, etc.). 8. Reporting crime in emergencies [45 CFR 164.512(f)(6)]. “You are an emergency health care worker who responded to a medical emergency outside the hospital (etc.) and you can tell law enforcement about the commission and nature of the crime; location of the crime and victims; the identity, description or location of the perpetrator...” 9. Victims of abuse, neglect, domestic violence [45 CFR 164.512(c)]. This exception is limited to four specific scenarios; if possible, get a subpoena or the individual’s agreement to use his/her medical information instead of relying on this exception. 10. Coroners [45 CFR 164.512(g)(1)]. “Because the coroner or medical examiner needs the information to determine the cause of death or perform his other duties…” 11. To avert a serious threat to health/safety [45 CFR 164.512(j). “The disclosure is necessary to avert a serious and imminent threat to a person’s safety or the public...; OR to identify or apprehend an individual ... because that individual admitted participating in a violent crime that may have caused serious physical harm to the victim”; OR “to identify or apprehend someone who escaped from a correctional institution or from lawful custody.” 12. Other important miscellaneous exceptions: National security and intelligence; protective services for the President and others; jails, prisons, law enforcement custody to safeguard the person/s in custody or corrections employees who are in proximity of the person/s in custody. Remember to show your badge, that you need to satisfy only ONE of the law enforcement exceptions, AND that you also must familiarize yourself with the requirements of your state’s medical records privacy laws. To stop a Covered Entity from disclosing to patients that you have their medical information, (1) make an oral request that the entity not make a disclosure to the patient and (2) follow up with a written request, on official letterhead, within 30 days. 77 Materials U.S. Department of Justice HIPAA Card Side 1 Side 2 78 Training Aids Notes Slide 7-1 Slide 7-2 Slide 7-3 79 Training Aids Notes Slide 7-4 Slide 7-5 Slide 7-6 80 Training Aids Notes Slide 7-7 Slide 7-8 Slide 7-9 81 Training Aids Notes Slide 7-10 Slide 7-11 Slide 7-12 82 Training Aids Notes Slide 7-13 Slide 7-14 83