In Re KKB

1980 OK 7, 609 P.2d 747
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 15, 1980
Docket51467
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1980 OK 7 (In Re KKB) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re KKB, 1980 OK 7, 609 P.2d 747 (Okla. 1980).

Opinion

609 P.2d 747 (1980)

In re the Mental Health of K.K.B.

No. 51467.

Supreme Court of Oklahoma.

January 15, 1980.
Rehearing Denied April 28, 1980.

Charles R. Hogshead, Tulsa, for appellant.

Christopher A. Hansen, New York Civil Liberties Union, New York City, for amicus curiae.

Wesley G. Gibson, Chief Counsel, State Dept. of Mental Health, Oklahoma City, for appellee.

*748 DOOLIN, Justice:

This appeal involves the right of a legally competent person involuntarily committed to a medical facility pursuant to 43A O.S. 1978 Supp. § 54.1, to refuse to consent to the administration of certain anti-psychotic drugs.

In July 1977, K.K.B., after a jury trial, was ordered admitted to Eastern State Hospital at Vinita, Oklahoma, as a person in need of treatment defined by statute. After her admission, K.K.B. refused to consent to the administration of anti-psychotic drugs by hospital personnel. In order to determine what course to follow, the superintendent of the hospital (State) filed an application for a declaratory judgment pursuant to 12 O.S. 1971 § 1651 et seq.

Section 64 of the Mental Health Law, 43A O.S. 1971, was amended by the Legislature just prior to this application effective June 3, 1977. It provides:

"No person admitted to any medical facility shall be considered or presumed to be mentally or legally incompetent except those persons who have been determined to be mentally or legally incompetent in separate and independent proceedings of an appropriate district court."

The trial court found K.K.B., by virtue of this statute, was mentally and legally competent in that no separate or independent proceeding to determine incompetency had been held. However, it interpreted this statute as dealing with general competency other than competency to refuse medication. It found the competency referred to in § 64 had no effect on commitment and treatment procedures.

The court ordered K.K.B. to submit to treatment and authorized the hospital to take such steps as necessary to enforce such treatment. K.K.B. appeals, arguing legally competent persons have a constitutional right to refuse to take powerful drugs that will affect their mental processes and may cause serious side effects.

In 1952, a new era in treatment of psychiatric disorders began through the use of anti-psychotic or psychotropic drugs. These are a class of drugs known as major tranquilizers.[1] K.K.B. is suffering from schizophrenia, the etiology of which is not known. There are no physical symptoms and no physical basis for schizophrenia. However, almost half of the patients comprising the population of our public mental health facilities suffer from this psychosis. It is the most likely disorder to be treated with psychotropic drugs, but the precise nature of the benefits of these drugs is as yet uncertain and the dangers the drugs seek to avoid are usually not great. Psychotropic drugs do not cure schizophrenia and patients rarely recover, but merely go into remission which can also be spontaneous without the use of drugs.[2]

Unfortunately rather unpleasant primary and side effects often accompany the use of psychotropic drugs which many people would prefer to avoid even at the risk of continuing mental disorder.[3]

*749 The public's long dormant interest in the human rights of mental patients has been aroused by vocal formal patients, activists and concerned professionals. It is time to recognize liberty includes the freedom to decide about one's own health. This principle need not give way to medical judgment.

Prior to the 1977 amendment to Oklahoma's Mental Health Law § 64, quoted above, provided a commitment under § 54.1 (previously § 55) could be treated as an adjudication of mental incompetence.[4] That is no longer the case. The question of competency and the right to function as a full citizen must now be adjudicated separately from the question of mental disability. Current practices often cause the two to appear synonymous. They are not. Oklahoma's Legislature through amendments to Title 43A has enacted a credible reform to end, in some areas, the blanket denial of personal rights to patients in mental institutions.[5]

Although it is argued a judicial decision to commit is still an implicit finding patient is unable to make treatment decisions, competency is not a medical decision and should not merge with the commitment decision. Voluntary patients suffering exact symptoms as their committed counterparts are not automatically presumed incompetent to consent. Commitment in an institution does not necessarily mean a person is incapable of appropriately deciding whether or not he prefers to be treated with psychotropic drugs.

Other courts have consistently held a patient in a mental hospital has a constitutional right to meaningful treatment.[6] We adopt this view and hold it is the law in the State of Oklahoma.

Protecting the rights of the mentally ill presents an inordinate number of dilemmas. A patient has an absolute right to meaningful treatment and a contrary right to refuse treatment; a correlative duty is imposed on the state to provide such treatment. For this reason we deal today only with consent to so called "organic therapy" which can change a patient's behavior without his co-operation such as electroshock, psychosurgery[7] and, as in the instant case, the use of anti-psychotic drugs.[8] These treatments are intrusive in nature and an invasion of the body.

State is seeking permission to administer these drugs forcibly to competent patients in nonemergency situations, arguing *750 involuntary commitment allows it to make treatment decisions under its parens patriae power. We do not agree.

In Winters v. Miller, 446 F.2d 65 (2nd Cir.1971), cert. den. 404 U.S. 985, 92 S.Ct. 450, 30 L.Ed.2d 369, a committed patient brought an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming her first amendment right to freedom of religion had been violated by forcible medication. The patient, in Winters, had never been found mentally incompetent and there was no presumption of incompetence under New York law comparable to § 64. The circuit court refused to recognize any public policy argument that because of the nature of the illness as mental, the patient should be denied the right to give an informed consent to the treatment. It held the parens patriae relationship does not materialize until a patient is judicially declared incompetent.[9] We are persuaded parens patriae is not broad enough to control medical decisions of a competent person. Parens patriae arises only when an adult patient has been judicially determined incompetent.[10]

Because something is being done to him when he is forcibly medicated, a patient's emerging constitutional right of privacy may be violated.[11] In Rennie v. Klein, 462 F. Supp. 1131 (D.N.J. 1978), the district court, although denying an injunction against state psychiatrists and officials, supported the view, absent an emergency situation, involuntary mental patients have a right to refuse medication founded on a constitutional right to privacy.

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1980 OK 7, 609 P.2d 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kkb-okla-1980.