Texas Administrative Code
Title 25 - HEALTH SERVICES
Part 1 - DEPARTMENT OF STATE HEALTH SERVICES
Chapter 157 - EMERGENCY MEDICAL CARE
Subchapter B - EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES PROVIDER LICENSES
Section 157.25 - Out-of-Hospital Do Not Resuscitate (OOH-DNR) Order
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Purpose. The purpose of this section shall be to establish a statewide OOH-DNR protocol as required in the Health and Safety Code, Title 2, Chapter 166.
(b) Out-of-Hospital DNR order. An OOH-DNR order may be issued by an attending physician for any patient. That attending physician has responsibility for ensuring that the form is filled out in its entirety and that the information regarding the existence of an OOH-DNR order is entered into the patient's medical record.
(c) Protocol development. An OOH-DNR protocol in accordance with this section, shall apply to all out-of-hospital settings including cardiac arrests which occur during interfacility transport. The protocol shall include the following:
(d) Recordkeeping. Records shall be maintained on each incident in which an OOH-DNR order or OOH-DNR identification device is encountered by responding healthcare professionals, and the number of cases where there is an on-site revocation of the DNR order shall be recorded.
(e) Out-of-state OOH-DNR Orders. Personnel may accept an OOH-DNR order or device that has been executed in any other state, if there is no reason to question the authenticity of the order or device.
(f) Failure to honor an OOH-DNR order. If there are any indications of unnatural or suspicious circumstances, the provider shall begin resuscitation efforts until such time as a physician directs otherwise.
(g) Pregnant persons. A person may not withhold the designated treatments listed in subsection (c)(1) from a person known by responding healthcare professionals to be pregnant.
(h) Out-of-Hospital DNR Form. The executive commissioner or the commissioner's appointees shall furnish the department's OOH-DNR order forms to physicians, clinics, hospitals, nursing homes, hospices and home health agencies throughout the state upon request.
(i) Out-of-Hospital DNR Identification devices. As an optional means of identification, a patient may obtain, at patient's expense, an OOH-DNR device. An OOH-DNR device, as approved by the Department of State Health Services, must meet the following requirements: