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State Audit Finds Lapses At New York Mental Health Agency

New York’s mental health facilities are not ensuring parents and guardians are properly notified of incidents of abuse and neglect, according to a recent audit by state Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli.

“Vulnerable patients are at greater risk when their parents and family members are kept in the dark,” DiNapoli said. “Jonathan’s Law can only help prevent tragedies if abuse and mistreatment in mental health facilities is properly reported and actions are taken. State officials must do more to ensure facilities are meeting requirements.”

In February 2007, Jonathan Carey, a 13-year-old non-verbal autistic and developmentally disabled boy, died while in the care of a state facility. His parents had attempted multiple times to obtain information concerning several unexplained injuries, unauthorized changes in treatment and suspected abuse and neglect.

In May 2007, “Jonathan’s Law” was enacted to expand parents’, spouses’, guardians’, and other qualified persons’ access to records relating to incidents involving family members residing in facilities operated, licensed or certified by the Office of Mental Health and other state agencies.

Reportable incidents under Jonathan’s Law involve abuse (physical, sexual or psychological) or neglect, as well as incidents that may result in or have the potential to result in harm to the health, safety or welfare of a patient.

The state Office of Mental Health manages the operation of 24 state psychiatric centers and the oversight of more than 650 providers that operate private facilities. For the period April 1, 2015 through Jan. 9, 2019, a sample of eight facilities were examined, including four operated by the state and four operated by licensed providers. Auditors found that the Office of Mental Health did not implement processes to effectively monitor whether these state and privately-run facilities are complying with Jonathan’s Law requirements.

While auditors found that facilities have established practices for notifying qualified persons within 24 hours of initial reporting of incidents, 20 percent of the incidents reviewed (42 total, all involving children under the age of 18) lacked support showing that the required notification had been made.

The Office of Mental Health’s interpretation of Jonathan’s Law potentially hinders access by qualified persons to pertinent information concerning treatment of their family members, according to the Comptroller’s Office audit. Auditors also found facilities do not always provide all records to parents and guardians when requested or are not providing them within 21 days of a request or the conclusion of the investigation, as required. Only 33 percent of the records reviewed were provided within the required time frame, the audit states.

Additional findings in the audit include:

¯ The Office of Mental Health does not use the state Incident Management and Reporting System to capture information related to Jonathan’s Law compliance and cannot readily determine whether facility officials are meeting the law’s requirements.

¯ Each facility provided different information — with some offering more detail than others — to qualified persons when fulfilling records requests. As a result, qualified persons may not be receiving all pertinent information on incidents affecting the well-being of their family members.

¯ DiNapoli recommended the Office of Mental Health incorporate the reporting of actions taken to comply with Jonathan’s Law into NIMRS to allow the office to more readily track efforts to meet requirements. Also, office should provide updated guidance to facilities on their responsibilities related to Jonathan’s Law requirements including clear and consistent implementation procedures and require their prompt implementation.

The agency disputed the audit’s findings in its formal response and in a statement said patient safety is its top priority.

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