D. T. v. Department of Human Services

269 P.3d 96, 247 Or. App. 293, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 1746
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 21, 2011
Docket20100200; A145182
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 269 P.3d 96 (D. T. v. Department of Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D. T. v. Department of Human Services, 269 P.3d 96, 247 Or. App. 293, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 1746 (Or. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

*295 WOLLHEIM, J.

Petitioner, a patient at the Oregon State Hospital, seeks judicial review of an administrative order entered following a contested case hearing authorizing the hospital to forcibly medicate him with multiple psychotropic drugs. Petitioner argues that the order should be reversed because the Department of Human Services, the agency operating the hospital, (1) did not rebut the presumption that petitioner is competent to make treatment decisions for himself, and (2) did not demonstrate that the hospital had considered all less intrusive alternatives to involuntary medication — in particular, the alternative of returning petitioner to the maximum security ward where his symptoms had been managed without psychotropic drugs. We agree with petitioner on the latter point, and we therefore reverse and remand the order.

We take the facts from the unchallenged findings in the final agency order, and the undisputed evidence in the record. 1 In 2007, petitioner, then 48 years old, assaulted his sister in a home they shared with their mother. According to a police report of the incident, petitioner became agitated when his sister was making noise while he was watching television. Petitioner eventually chased his sister to the driveway of the house, where he repeatedly punched her in the head and slammed her head into concrete. He was arrested and charged with assault.

Petitioner was deemed unable to aid and assist in his defense, and he was twice admitted to the Oregon State Hospital for “restoration of competency.” During his time at the hospital, petitioner lived on ward 48C, one of its maximum security wards. His discharge summary for that pretrial period, dated January 6, 2009, indicated that petitioner “did fair in the milieu. He did not require seclusion or restraint and never expressed thoughts of harming himself or others.” His “condition at discharge” was “[s]table; though continues with cognitive dysfunction including limited executive functioning, poor memory, and an isolated delusion.” *296 That “isolated delusion” was the “idea that he was exposed to ether when he used a friend’s toothbrush years ago,” and that the “ether has remained in his system and is contributing to his physical ailments.”

Dr. Lockey, who conducted an assessment in January 2009, opined that, at that time, petitioner’s “delusional thoughts are fairly isolated and are not negatively impacting his life to a significant extent at this point.” Because the delusions were not “impacting his day-to-day functioning,” petitioner was not treated with antipsychotic or antidepressant medications; “[t]he cognitive impact would have likely been more negative than the benefits he may have had from these treatments.” Nonetheless, Lockey noted, “At some point in the future if his delusional thoughts get significantly worse, he may benefit from an antipsychotic medication or selective serotonin inhibitor (shown to help with somatic delusions [2] ).”

After being found able to aid and assist in his defense, petitioner, with the assistance of counsel, pleaded guilty except for insanity. As a result of the plea, petitioner was placed under the jurisdiction of the Psychiatric Security Review Board (PSRB) for up to 10 years and was readmitted in March 2009 to the Oregon State Hospital. Upon arriving at the hospital, petitioner was again housed in a maximum security ward, 48B.

While on the 48 wards — that is, before his plea and then later at the beginning of the period of his commitment to PSRB jurisdiction — the three psychiatrists who evaluated petitioner, Drs. Lockey, Duran, and Lagattuta, had not recommended treatment with psychotropic medication. In fact, when petitioner was first admitted to the hospital, there was some question as to whether he even suffered from a psychotic disorder. Petitioner had suffered a brain injury as the result of a motorcycle accident when he was younger and had spent several weeks in a coma. Lagattuta, who conducted petitioner’s initial psychology assessment shortly after his plea, concluded that his “primary psychiatric problem seems to be the cognitive deficits caused by the aforementioned *297 head injury that the patient experienced.” Although petitioner “appeared] to manifest some thought content that falls into the category of overvalued ideas (if not delusions),” Lagattuta was of the view that “[i]t is likely that this thought content is part of the constellation of symptoms related to his head injury. It does not appear that a separate diagnosis of a psychotic disorder is warranted at this time” (Emphasis added.) Among his recommendations, Lagattuta listed, “Psychopharmacological treatment should be considered for the patient’s cognitive problems (including his possible delusional thought content).”

In May 2009, three months after readmission to the hospital, petitioner was transferred to a lower security ward, 50G. The undisputed evidence is that ward 50G is a more chaotic environment than the maximum security wards; ward 50G is overcrowded and has fewer staff per patient than wards 48B and 48C, where petitioner had resided. Upon being transferred, petitioner became “very angry and nonresponsive to redirection from institution staff.” Petitioner’s behavior “became so out of control that the institution restrained and secluded him.”

In July 2009, petitioner was assigned a new treating psychiatrist, Dr. Sethi. Almost immediately thereafter, petitioner and Sethi disagreed over the subject of psychotropic medication. In his notes from July 16, 2009, Sethi wrote:

“[Petitioner] refuses to discuss or consider psychotropic medications. He denies any responsibility for his verbal abuse [and] outbursts. I will consider the possibility of initiating the process of involuntary meds. [Petitioner] will probably benefit from a combination of a mood stabilizer [and] an antipsychotic.”

Over the next several months, petitioner’s behavior on ward 50G worsened. He had intense verbal outbursts in which he threatened to become violent; he also expressed feelings of being persecuted by staff and fellow patients. According to Sethi’s September 2009 notes, petitioner denied being mentally ill, demanded to be discharged, and threatened physical violence.

In November 2009, petitioner was involved in an incident with another patient that escalated to the point that *298 petitioner “aggressively postured and threatened staff with physical injury and death.” He was “so angry, out of control and non-responsive to directions that he needed to be medicated, restrained and secluded.” Petitioner received an emergency involuntary dose of olanzapine, an antipsychotic drug, and his behavior improved after the drug was administered. As a result of that incident, petitioner was transferred back to ward 48B, one of the maximum security wards.

Six weeks later, petitioner was moved back to ward 50G, at which point Sethi attempted to provide petitioner information regarding psychotropic medication. Petitioner became angry and repeatedly denied having a mental illness or needing the proposed medication.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P.3d 96, 247 Or. App. 293, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 1746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-t-v-department-of-human-services-orctapp-2011.