Transcript Slide 1

SUBSTANCE ABUSE
TREATMENT
CONFIDENTIALITY
National Center on
Substance Abuse & Child Welfare
February 17, 2004
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Vignette #1
Lori Nelson, a DCFS referred mother, scheduled an
assessment and doesn’t show or cancel. Dave the
assessor wants to contact the referral source to notify
them that Lori did not follow through. Dave is not
sure what to do because he does not have a signed
release of information.
Does Dave need consent to share the information with the referral
source (DCFS)?
If DCFS indicates Lori gave verbal consent, can Dave share the
information?
In cases of court-ordered referrals (DCFS, TANF, TASC) do rules
differ?
If Lori were a 14-year old, could Dave tell her parents?
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Vignette #2
You receive a report from a substance abuse counselor
concerning Raina, a client who had been court-ordered to
treatment. DCFS is currently investigating Raina’s fitness to
have custody of her children. The counselor reports that
Raina walked out of the treatment center after telling the
counselor that she had no intention of quitting her cocaine use,
that she’s been using cocaine everyday in treatment and that
she only came into treatment because of the threat of the
judge taking away her kids. As she leaves the facility, Raina
says “I revoke my consent – Ha-ha you cannot tell the judge”.
Is Raina’s verbal revocation of consent legally valid?
What should the treatment provider have said or not said to you?
Does the treatment provider have a right and/or obligation to notify
DCFS?
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Vignette #3
You are a DCFS case worker. During your testimony in
a custody proceeding, the state’s attorney asks you to
indicate whether the mother, Liz, is receiving or has
received substance abuse treatment. You are aware
that Liz recently voluntarily enrolled in an outpatient
treatment program for her methamphetamine addiction.
The treatment program shared the information with
you after obtaining Liz’s signed consent to disclose
information to DCFS and DHS for case management
and discharge planning purposes.
Can you testify about your knowledge of Liz’s addiction
and/or treatment?
If you refuse to answer, can the judge order you to
answer? If she does, how should you respond?
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Vignette #4
You have been subpoenaed to testify in a termination
proceeding. You know that both birth parents have
received treatment for drug and/or alcohol addiction in the
past, but over the course of your assessment, you were
pleased that you saw no signs of relapse by either parent.
The day before the hearing, you see the father in a local
bar, drinking heavily and visibly intoxicated. The father
begs you not to tell anyone, and says that he drank “just
this once” because he was nervous about the hearing.
What do you say to the father?
To whom may you disclose what you saw?
Must you tell the court what happened , even if you are only asked
about your formal report?
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Vignette #5
Jan is a 15-year old new mother whose mother is participating in
your program. Jan’s mother has a history of heroin addiction. Jan
contacted her case worker requesting counseling services for
problems that include her drug use. She is adamant in her refusal
to allow you to share this information with her mother, or to include
it in any report to DCFS. Jan fears that if she seeks treatment,
her child will be removed from her care, just as she was once
removed from her mother’s care. Jan swears that she will seek
counseling only under the condition that you tell “nobody”. You
believe she needs help.
How would you respond to this situation?
Does Jan have a legal right at age fifteen to consent to treatment
services?
Who, if anyone, would you tell about Jan’s drug use?
Do you have any ethical or legal responsibilities to Jan’s mother in this
situation?
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