Colorado Code § 27-65-109

Certification for short-term treatment - procedure
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) A person may be
certified for not more than three months for short-term treatment under the following conditions:
(a) The professional staff of the facility detaining the person on an emergency mental
health hold has evaluated the person and has found the person has a mental health disorder and,
as a result of the mental health disorder, is a danger to the person's self or others or is gravely
disabled;
(b) The person has been advised of the availability of, but has not accepted, voluntary
treatment; but, if reasonable grounds exist to believe that the person will not remain in a
voluntary treatment program, the person's acceptance of voluntary treatment does not preclude
certification;
(c) The facility or community provider that will provide short-term treatment has been
designated by the commissioner to provide such treatment; and
(d) The person, the person's legal guardian, and the person's lay person, if applicable,
have been advised of the person's right to an attorney and to contest the certification for short-
term treatment.
(2) The notice of certification must be signed by a professional person who participated
in the evaluation. The notice of certification must:
(a) State facts sufficient to establish reasonable grounds to believe that the respondent
has a mental health disorder and, as a result of the mental health disorder, is a danger to the
respondent's self or others or is gravely disabled;
(b) Be filed with the court within forty-eight hours, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and
court holidays, after the date of certification;
(c) Be filed with the court in the county in which the respondent resided or was
physically present immediately prior to being taken into custody; and
(d) Provide recommendations if the certification should take place on an inpatient or
outpatient basis.
(3) Within twenty-four hours after certification, copies of the certification must be
personally delivered to the respondent, the BHA, and a copy must be kept by the evaluating
facility as part of the respondent's record, if applicable. The facility or court shall ask the
respondent to designate a lay person whom the respondent wishes to be informed regarding
certification. If the respondent is incapable of making such a designation at the time the
certification is delivered, the respondent must be asked to designate a lay person as soon as the
respondent is capable. In addition to the copy of the certification, the respondent must be given a
written notice that a hearing upon the respondent's certification for short-term treatment may be
had before the court or a jury upon written request directed to the court pursuant to subsection
(6) of this section.
(4) Upon certification of the respondent, the facility designated for short-term treatment
has custody of the respondent.
(5) Whenever a certification is filed with the court by a professional person, the court
shall immediately appoint an attorney to represent the respondent. The respondent has the right
to an attorney for all proceedings conducted pursuant to this section, including any appeals. The
attorney representing the respondent must be provided with a copy of the certification
immediately upon the attorney's appointment. The respondent may only waive counsel when the
respondent makes a knowing and intelligent waiver in front of the court.
(6) The respondent or the respondent's attorney may at any time file a written request
that the certification for short-term treatment or the treatment be reviewed by the court or that
the treatment be on an outpatient basis. If review is requested, the court shall hear the matter
within ten days after the request, and the court shall give notice to the respondent and the
respondent's attorney and the certifying and treating professional person of the time and place of
the hearing. The hearing must be held in accordance with section 27-65-113. At the conclusion
of the hearing, the court may enter or confirm the certification for short-term treatment,
discharge the respondent, or enter any other appropriate order.
(7) Records and papers in proceedings pursuant to this section must be maintained
separately by the clerks of the several courts. Upon the release of any respondent in accordance
with section 27-65-112, the facility shall notify the clerk of the court within five days after the
release, and the clerk shall immediately seal the record in the case and omit the name of the
respondent from the index of cases in the court until and unless the respondent becomes subject
to an order of certification for long-term care and treatment pursuant to section 27-65-110 or
until and unless the court orders the records opened for good cause shown. In the event a petition
is filed pursuant to section 27-65-110, the certification record may be opened and become a part
of the record in the long-term care and treatment case and the name of the respondent indexed.
(8) Whenever it appears to the court, by reason of a report by the treating professional
person or the BHA or any other report satisfactory to the court, that a respondent detained for
evaluation and treatment or certified for short-term treatment should be transferred to another
facility for treatment and the safety of the respondent or the public requires that the respondent
be transported by a secure transportation provider or a law enforcement agency, the court may
issue an order directing the law enforcement agency where the respondent resides or secure
transportation provider to deliver the respondent to the designated facility.
(9) A respondent certified for short-term treatment may be discharged upon the signature
of the treating medical professional and the medical director of the facility. A respondent
certified for short-term treatment on an outpatient basis may be discharged upon the signature of
the approved professional person overseeing the respondent's treatment, and the professional
person shall notify the BHA prior to the discharge. A facility or program shall make the
respondent's discharge instructions available to the respondent, the respondent's attorney, and the
respondent's legal guardian, if applicable, within seven days after discharge, if requested. A
facility or program that is transferring a respondent to a different treatment facility or to an
outpatient provider shall provide all treatment records to the facility or provider accepting the
respondent at least twenty-four hours prior to the transfer.
(10) If the professional person in charge of the evaluation and treatment believes that a
period longer than three months is necessary to treat the respondent, the professional person shall
file with the court an extended certification at least thirty days prior to the expiration date of the
original certification. An extended certification for treatment must not be for a period of more
than three months. The respondent is entitled to a hearing on the extended certification under the
same conditions as an original certification. The attorney initially representing the respondent
shall continue to represent the respondent, unless the court appoints another attorney.

‹ Prev All Colorado sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.