Cal. Advocates for Nursing Home Reform v. Smith

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 22, 2019
DocketA147987
StatusPublished

This text of Cal. Advocates for Nursing Home Reform v. Smith (Cal. Advocates for Nursing Home Reform v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cal. Advocates for Nursing Home Reform v. Smith, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 7/22/19 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

CALIFORNIA ADVOCATES FOR NURSING HOME REFORM et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A147987

v. (Alameda County KAREN SMITH, as Director, etc., Super. Ct. No. RG13700100) Defendant and Appellant.

I. INTRODUCTION Health and Safety Code section 1418.8 (section 1418.8) sets forth procedures to be followed for nursing home residents who lack capacity to make their own health care decisions. Most of the affected residents are elderly, many are poor, and all may be described as “unbefriended” in the sense they are without family members, friends or other legal surrogates to make health care decisions for them. The statute requires an interdisciplinary team (IDT) approach to decisionmaking for these residents. California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform (CANHR), a nonprofit entity advocating for the rights of nursing home patients, together with a nursing home resident and a taxpayer (collectively, petitioners), challenged the constitutionality of section 1418.8 under the California Constitution by a petition for writ of mandate against the Director of the Department of Public Health (Department), a position now held by Dr. Karen Smith (Director). The superior court issued an order holding section 1418.8 unconstitutional in three respects, one on its face and two as applied: It held the statute (1) on its face, violates due process under the California Constitution by failing to require notice to residents of a

1 physician’s predicate determinations that the patient lacks capacity, has no surrogate decisionmaker, needs a recommended medical intervention, and has a right to judicial review; (2) was never intended to authorize IDT decisionmaking for administration of antipsychotic medication, and it violates due process, as applied, when used to authorize such drugs; and (3) violates the patient’s privacy rights and is unconstitutional as applied to decisions regarding end of life withdrawal of care. The court entered judgment accordingly, issuing a writ of mandate that prohibited enforcement of the statute in the absence of notice to the affected resident; prohibited use of the statute to administer antipsychotics; and prohibited use of the statute in end of life decisions, subject to several exceptions, including an exception for transfer to hospice care. Both parties appealed. The Director claims the statute is constitutional in all respects, and petitioners argue it is unconstitutional in additional particulars beyond those enjoined. Petitioners take the position, ultimately, that the statute should be declared unconstitutional in its entirety and that we should forbid its enforcement categorically, leaving the Legislature to begin again trying to solve the problem of how to provide for the medical needs of incapacitated, unbefriended nursing home residents. We see merit to much of the superior court’s analysis concluding that section 1418.8 is constitutionally deficient, but agree with enough of the Director’s position to convince us that the proper course is to construe the statute to uphold its constitutionality rather than enjoin its enforcement and use. We shall therefore reverse and remand with directions to enter a modified judgment requiring nursing homes utilizing section 1418.8 to adopt and adhere to additional procedures we have concluded are necessary to preserve its constitutionality. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. History and Purpose of Section 1418.8 When it was enacted in 1992, section 1418.8 was intended to give skilled nursing

2 facilities and intermediate care facilities 1 a means of decisionmaking for incapacitated residents without someone “with legal authority to make” health care decisions on his or her “behalf” (§ 1418.8, subd. (a)), including “day-to-day medical treatment decisions . . . on an on-going basis,” which were difficult to secure using the pre-existing legal methods. (Stats. 1992, ch. 1303, § 1(b), p. 6327.) A decision by Division Five of this district, which we will discuss in detail below, also observed that section 1418.8 “applies only to the relatively nonintrusive and routine, ongoing medical intervention[.]” (Rains v. Belshé (1995) 32 Cal.App.4th 157, 186 (Rains).) Before the statute’s enactment, capacity decisions were made in superior court on a petition to determine capacity to make health care decisions. (Prob. Code, § 3200 et seq.) “A petition may be filed to determine that a patient lacks the capacity to make a health care decision concerning specified treatment for an existing or continuing condition, and further for an order authorizing a designated person to make a health care decision on behalf of the patient.” (Prob. Code, § 3201, subd. (b).) A petition may also seek a finding by the court that the patient has such capacity. (Id., subds. (a), (c).) In enacting section 1418.8, the Legislature sought to provide a decisionmaking alternative when recommended medical procedures require informed consent. (See Cobbs v. Grant (1972) 8 Cal.3d 229, 244-245 [informed consent required when there is a known risk of death or serious bodily harm as a result of a recommended treatment].) As described in Rains, section 1418.8 addresses a “very difficult and perplexing problem: how to provide nonemergency but necessary and appropriate medical treatment,

1 Skilled nursing facilities provide 24-hour skilled nursing and supportive care to resident individuals whose primary need is for the availability of skilled nursing care on an extended basis. (See Health & Saf. Code, § 1250, subd. (c)(1).) Intermediate care facilities provide 24-hour inpatient care to individuals who are developmentally disabled or who otherwise do not require continuous skilled nursing care, but have recurring need for skilled nursing supervision and require supportive care. (See id., § 1250, subds. (d), (g) & (h).) We will refer to skilled nursing facilities and intermediate care facilities collectively and generically as nursing homes through the remainder of the opinion. We use “patient” and “resident” interchangeably, in each case referring to one who lives in a nursing home.

3 frequently of an ongoing nature, to nursing home patients who lack capacity to consent thereto because of incompetence, and who have no surrogate or substitute decision maker with legal authority to consent for them.” (Rains, supra, 32 Cal.App.4th at p. 166, fn. omitted; see id. at p. 178 [“continuing and significant dilemma”].) To address this “legal conundrum of long standing” (Rains, supra, 32 Cal.App.4th at p. 166), section 1418.8—utilizing what is described as a “team approach to assessment and care planning”—authorizes an IDT composed of health professionals and other skilled staff from the nursing home, along with a “patient representative,” “where practicable,” to review and authorize medical treatment. (§ 1418.8, subd. (e); see id., subds.

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Bluebook (online)
Cal. Advocates for Nursing Home Reform v. Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cal-advocates-for-nursing-home-reform-v-smith-calctapp-2019.