Arizona Administrative Code
Title 9 - HEALTH SERVICES
Chapter 21 - ARIZONA HEALTH CARE COST CONTAINMENT SYSTEM (AHCCCS) BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SERVICES FOR PERSONS WITH SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS
Article 2 - RIGHTS OF PERSONS WITH SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESS
Section R9-21-201 - Civil and Other Legal Rights
Universal Citation: AZ Admin Code R 9-21-201
Current through Register Vol. 30, No. 52, December 27, 2024
A. Clients shall have all rights accorded by applicable law, including but not limited to those prescribed in A.R.S. §§ 36-504 through 36517.02. Any individual or agency providing behavioral health services or community services as defined in R9-21-101 shall not abridge these rights, including the following:
1. Those civil rights set forth in
A.R.S. §
36-506;
2. The right to acquire and dispose of
property, to execute instruments, to enter into contractual relationships, to
hold professional or occupational or vehicle operator's licenses, unless the
client has been adjudicated incompetent or there has been a judicial order or
finding that such client is unable to exercise the specific right or category
of rights. In the case of a client adjudicated incompetent, these rights may be
exercised by the client's guardian, in accordance with applicable
law;
3. The right to be free from
unlawful discrimination by the Administration or by any mental health agency on
the basis of race, creed, religion, sex, sexual preference, age, physical or
mental handicap or degree of handicap; provided, however, classifications based
on age, sex, category or degree of handicap shall not be considered
discriminatory, if based on written criteria of client selection developed by a
mental health agency and approved by the Administration as necessary to the
safe operation of the mental health agency and in the best interests of the
clients involved;
4. The right to
equal access to all existing behavioral health services, community services,
and generic services provided by or through the state of Arizona;
5. The right to religious freedom and
practice, without compulsion and according to the preference of the
client;
6. The right to vote,
unless under guardianship, including reasonable assistance when desired in
registering and voting in a nonpartisan and noncoercive manner;
7. The right to communicate including:
a. The right to have reasonable access to a
telephone and reasonable opportunities to make and receive confidential calls
and to have assistance when desired and necessary to implement this
right;
b. The unrestricted right to
send and receive uncensored and unopened mail, to be provided with stationery
and postage in reasonable amounts, and to receive assistance when desired and
necessary to implement this right;
8. The right to be visited and visit with
others, provided that reasonable restrictions may be placed on the time and
place of the visit but only to protect the privacy of other clients or to avoid
serious disruptions in the normal functioning of the mental health
agency;
9. The right to associate
with anyone of the client's choosing, to form associations, and to discuss as a
group, with those responsible for the program, matters of general interest to
the client, provided that these do not result in serious disruptions in the
normal functioning of the mental health agency. Clients shall receive
cooperation from the mental health agency if they desire to publicize and hold
meetings and clients shall be entitled to invite visitors to attend and
participate in such meetings, provided that they do not result in serious
disruptions in the normal functioning of the mental health agency;
10. The right to privacy, including the right
not to be fingerprinted and photographed without authorization, except as
provided by A.R.S. §
36-507(2);
11. The right to be informed, in appropriate
language and terms, of client rights;
12. The right to assert grievances with
respect to infringement of these rights, including the right to have such
grievances considered in a fair, timely, and impartial procedure, as set forth
in Article 4 of these rules, and the right not to be retaliated against for
filing a grievance;
13. The right
of access to the Office of Human Rights to request assistance in order to
understand, exercise, and protect a client's rights;
14. The right to be assisted by an attorney
or designated representative of the client's own choice, including the right to
meet in a private area at the program or facility with an attorney or
designated representative. Nothing in this Chapter shall be construed to
require the Administration or any mental health agency to pay for the services
of an attorney who consults with or represents a client;
15. The right to exercise all other rights,
entitlements, privileges, immunities provided by law, and specifically those
rights of consumers of behavioral health services or community services set
forth in A.R.S. §§
36-504 through
36-517.02;
16. The same civil rights as all other
citizens of Arizona, including the right to marry and to obtain a divorce, to
have a family, and to live in the community of their choice without constraints
upon their independence, except those constraints to which all citizens are
subject.
B. Nothing in this Article shall be interpreted to:
1. Give
the power, right, or authority to any person or mental health agency to
authorize sterilization, abortion, or psychosurgery with respect to any client,
except as may otherwise be provided by law; or
2. Restrict the right of physicians, nurses,
and emergency medical technicians to render emergency care or treatment in
accordance with A.R.S. §
36-512; or
3. Construe this rule to confer
constitutional or statutory rights not already present.
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