Pitts v. Department of Social & Health Services

119 P.3d 896, 129 Wash. App. 513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 13, 2005
DocketNo. 31489-4-II
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 119 P.3d 896 (Pitts v. Department of Social & Health Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pitts v. Department of Social & Health Services, 119 P.3d 896, 129 Wash. App. 513 (Wash. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

¶1 William Pitts appeals an administrative ruling that he is not eligible for services from the Division of Developmental Disabilities because he is not “substantially handicapped.” We affirm, holding that the administrative law judge did not err in interpreting the rules and that sufficient evidence demonstrates that Pitts is not “substantially handicapped” according to the administrative rules defining covered developmental disabilities.

Armstrong, J.

FACTS

¶2 William R. Pitts, who was born on December 4,1963, began having convulsive seizures at 11 months of age. In 1971, he was tested for intelligence and found to be functioning in the “normal to above average ‘bright’ range.” [517]*517Administrative Record (AR) at 71. Then in 1975, he suffered a grand mal seizure, was in a coma for three days, and lost the ability to dress and care for himself. He also had difficulty communicating and could give only one-word responses. He exhibited psychotic behavior, aggression, and poor impulse control. His most recent full scale intelligence quotient was 71.

¶3 As a child, Pitts enrolled in special education in Wenatchee, Washington, and then at the Brown School in Austin, Texas.1 At age 18, he left the Brown School and returned to live with his mother. During his stay with her, he had at least three admissions to Eastern State Hospital, in addition to psychiatric hospitalizations in Bellingham and Western Washington State Hospital (WSH).

¶4 In 1994, Pitts applied to the Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) for employment and residential services. DDD is a division of the Department of Social and Health Services (Department). To determine whether his epilepsy constituted a “substantial handicap” sufficient to qualify for services, DDD solicited information about Pitts from Richard M. Lynn, M.D. AR at 57-58. Lynn wrote that Pitts “is notoriously unreliable about taking his medicines and supervision for that purpose would be a safety measure.” AR at 57. DDD found that he met the “epilepsy requirements for DDD eligibility.” AR at 58. At the time, Pitts was living in the community, either with his mother or in his own apartment.

¶5 Then in 1995, DDD began to question his eligibility, noting that he prepared most of his own meals, cleaned his own living area, and did not require any reminders or assistance with self-care tasks. But in 1997, he was admitted to WSH after a series of incidents involving unlawful behavior. These included an assault on his mother, exposing himself to children, and stalking women and touching them in a sexual manner.

[518]*518¶6 WSH staff members observed Pitts suffer up to five seizures since his admission in 1997, including two incidents in 2000 and three incidents in 2001. While he lost consciousness on at least two of these occasions, he did not fall but, instead, “went slowly on the ground” and was not physically injured. AR at 39. WSH staff supervises Pitts to ensure that he is taking his prescribed antiseizure medications as well as his antipsychotic medications. WSH has never reported that Pitts has overdosed or suffered from medication toxicity or life threatening side effects of his medications.

¶7 William Comte, M.S.W., AC-SW, reported that when Pitts resided with his mother or on his own, he would stop taking his medications and attending his appointments with his mental health counselor, and he would “predictably decompensate and engage in law breaking behavior, often of a sexual nature.” AR at 93. Yet Pitts has never exhibited assaultive behavior at WSH. And Pitts “fantasizes living independent of structure and limitations, but when given the opportunity, he quickly sabotages himself, stops adhering to medical directives and decompensates.” AR at 96.

¶8 In 2001, Greg Killingsworth of DDD reviewed Pitts’s file and concluded that Pitts no longer met the eligibility requirements for DDD services under the “epilepsy” category. Killingsworth emphasized that Pitts had no “risk of medication toxicity or serious dosage side effects threatening [his] life.” AR at 61-62. Consequently, he determined that Pitts did not suffer from a “substantial handicap” in connection with his epilepsy. AR at 38. In addition, he found that Pitts failed to qualify for services under other categories such as: (1) Mental Retardation, former WAC 388-825--030(2)(b) (2001); (2) Another Neurological Condition, former WAC 388-825-030(6)(a)(ii) (2001); or (3) Other Condition, former WAC 388-825-030(6)(b)(v) (2001).2

[519]*519¶9 Pitts appealed Killingsworth’s decision to the Office of Administrative Hearings. At the hearing, the parties agreed that Pitts had chronic epilepsy with partially controlled seizures. They also agreed that Pitts’s epilepsy originated before he reached 18 years of age and is expected to continue indefinitely.

¶10 Dr. Winston Yao, M.D., board certified neurologist at WSH, testified that without a supervised, structured environment, Pitts would likely not take his medications and that without them he would be at an increased risk for seizures and injury. He also said that Pitts “doesn’t need physical assistance ... to take [his medicine], but he needs [someone] to tell him the time to take it.” Audio Transcription (AT) (July 15, 2002) at 31.

f 11 Dr. Paul Hageman, attending psychiatrist at WSH, testified that although Pitts willingly takes his medications now, he has resisted taking them in the past. Pitts needs only an occasional reminder to take his medications, but he still requires “assistance of some kind” with his medications. AT (July 15, 2002) at 48. In general, he cooperates and takes his pills without physical assistance, and he is working toward “self medication,” a program “where a person identifies which medicines [they’re] taking and they know it by color and size.” AT (July 15, 2002) at 40-41. Dr. Hageman explained that Pitts has the cognitive ability to self-medicate, but “he’s not quite there.” AT (July 15, 2002) at 41-42. Pitts can open a bottle, differentiate between different pills, and take his medicine independently. He opined that “Pitts is able to . . . [identify medication, seek assistance in understanding medication issues, identify the possible side effects, [and] seek assistance with side effects.” AT (July 15, 2002) at 40.

¶12 Dr. Hageman also speculated that if there were no directives, and Pitts were relying on himself in the community, he would probably take no medication after a while. While Pitts understands he has to take his seizure medication, he does not appreciate the need for his psychiatric medication. And if Pitts stopped taking his psychiatric [520]*520medication, he would quickly lose the ability to understand the need to take his seizure medication. Dr. Hageman testified that if Pitts is not taking his seizure medication, his seizures can be dangerous, “[h]e could fall, hurt himself. . . [or] he could even die” from choking or suffocating. AT (July 15, 2002) 38, 46.

¶13 Mary Larson, resource management supervisor at DDD, testified that “the issue with Mr. Pitts is not that he would take too many medications, it’s, always his refusal to take medication.” AT (July 15, 2002) at 75. She clarified, “I don’t think there was ever a concern that he would overdose on medications.” AT (July 15, 2002) at 75.

¶14 Susan Poltl, program manager at DDD,3 testified that she was involved in developing the former Washington Administrative Code (WAC) 388-825-030.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

E.S. v. Regence BlueShield
W.D. Washington, 2024
Lynn v. Department of Social & Health Services
285 P.3d 178 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2012)
Samson v. City of Bainbridge Island
149 Wash. App. 33 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 P.3d 896, 129 Wash. App. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitts-v-department-of-social-health-services-washctapp-2005.