Oklahoma Code § 43A-1-103

Title 43A. Mental Health: Definitions
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When used in this title, unless otherwise expressly stated, or
unless the context or subject matter otherwise requires:
1.  “Department” means the Department of Mental Health and
Substance Abuse Services;
2.  “Chair” means the chair of the Board of Mental Health and
Substance Abuse Services;
3.  “Mental illness” means a substantial disorder of thought,
mood, perception, psychological orientation or memory that
significantly impairs judgment, behavior, capacity to recognize
reality or ability to meet the ordinary demands of life;
4.  “Board” means the Board of Mental Health and Substance Abuse
Services as established by the Mental Health Law;
5.  “Commissioner” means the Commissioner of Mental Health and
Substance Abuse Services;
6.  “Indigent person” means a person who does not have
sufficient assets or resources to support the person and to support
members of the family of the person lawfully dependent on the person
for support;

7.  “Facility” means any hospital, school, building, house or
retreat, authorized by law to have the care, treatment or custody of
an individual with mental illness, drug or alcohol dependency,
gambling addiction, or an eating disorder including, but not limited
to, public or private hospitals, community mental health centers,
clinics, satellites, and community-based structured crisis centers;
provided, that facility shall not mean a child guidance center
operated by the State Department of Health;
8.  “Consumer” means a person under care or treatment in a
facility pursuant to the Mental Health Law, or in an outpatient
status;
9.  “Care and treatment” means medical care and behavioral
health services, as well as food, clothing and maintenance,
furnished to a person;
10.  Whenever in this law or in any other law, or in any rule or
order made or promulgated pursuant to this law or to any other law,
or in the printed forms prepared for the admission of consumers or
for statistical reports, the words “insane”, “insanity”, “lunacy”,
“mentally sick”, “mental disease” or “mental disorder” are used,
such terms shall have equal significance to the words “mental
illness”;
11.  “Licensed mental health professional” means:
a. a psychiatrist who is a diplomate of the American
Board of Psychiatry and Neurology,
b. a psychiatrist who is a diplomate of the American
Osteopathic Board of Neurology and Psychiatry,
c. a physician licensed pursuant to the Oklahoma
Allopathic Medical and Surgical Licensure and
Supervision Act or the Oklahoma Osteopathic Medicine
Act,
d. a clinical psychologist who is duly licensed to
practice by the State Board of Examiners of
Psychologists,
e. a professional counselor licensed pursuant to the
Licensed Professional Counselors Act,
f. a person licensed as a clinical social worker pursuant
to the provisions of the Social Worker’s Licensing
Act,
g. a licensed marital and family therapist as defined in
the Marital and Family Therapist Licensure Act,
h. a licensed behavioral practitioner as defined in the
Licensed Behavioral Practitioner Act,
i. an advanced practice nurse as defined in the Oklahoma
Nursing Practice Act,
j. a physician’s assistant who is licensed in good
standing in this state, or

k. a licensed alcohol and drug counselor/mental health
(LADC/MH) as defined in the Licensed Alcohol and Drug
Counselors Act;
12.  “Mentally incompetent person” means any person who has been
adjudicated mentally or legally incompetent by an appropriate
district court;
13. a. “Person requiring treatment” means a person who
because of his or her mental illness or drug or
alcohol dependency meets at least one of the
following:
(1) poses a substantial risk of immediate physical
harm to self as manifested by evidence or serious
threats of or attempts at suicide or other
significant self-inflicted bodily harm,
(2) poses a substantial risk of immediate physical
harm to another person or persons as manifested
by evidence of violent behavior directed toward
another person or persons,
(3) has placed another person or persons in a
reasonable fear of violent behavior directed
towards such person or persons or serious
physical harm to them as manifested by serious
and immediate threats,
(4) is in a condition of severe deterioration that is
continuing, as has been observed within the
previous seventy-two-hour period such that,
without immediate intervention, there exists a
substantial risk that severe impairment or injury
will result to the person, or
(5) poses a substantial risk of immediate serious
physical injury to self or death as manifested by
evidence that the person is unable to provide for
and is not providing for his or her basic
physical needs.
b. To the extent it is reasonably available, the relevant
mental health or substance abuse history of the person
shall be considered and may be proffered as part of
the evidence to determine whether the person is a
person requiring treatment or an assisted outpatient.
The mental health or substance abuse history of the
person shall not be the sole basis for this
determination.
c. In determining whether the person is a person
requiring treatment, the following shall also be
considered along with any other relevant information:
(1) the person’s history of violence or criminal acts
including unadjudicated criminal acts if evidence

of the person’s culpability is evident or
established,
(2) the person’s history of compliance with mental
and behavioral health medication and treatment,
(3) the probability and result of the person’s
noncompliance with medication and treatment if
not committed,
(4) the consumer’s history of using weapons in an
illegal or unsafe manner, and
(5) any previous instances of harm, attempted harm,
or threatened harm to self or others.
d. Unless a person also meets the criteria established in
subparagraph a, b, or c of this paragraph, “person
requiring treatment” or an “assisted outpatient” shall
not mean:
(1) a person whose mental processes have been
weakened or impaired by reason of advanced years,
dementia, or Alzheimer’s disease,
(2) a person who is an individual with intellectual
disability or developmental disability as defined
in Section 1408 of Title 10 of the Oklahoma
Statutes,
(3) a person with seizure disorder,
(4) a person with a traumatic brain injury, or
(5) a person who is homeless.
e. (1) A person who meets the criteria established in
this paragraph but who is medically unstable may
be discharged and transported in accordance with
Section 1-110 of this title.  Alternatively, if
the facility holding the person is able to treat
the additional medical conditions of that person,
the facility may treat the additional medical
conditions in an effort to medically stabilize
the patient.
(2) If the facility holding the person is unable to
treat the additional medical conditions of a
person who meets the criteria established in this
paragraph, the patient shall be discharged and
transported in accordance with Section 1-110 of
this title.
(3) All time elapsed during medical stabilization
tolls the twelve-hour time for an initial
assessment pursuant to paragraph 1 of subsection
A of Section 5-208 of this title, and the one-
hundred-twenty-hour emergency detention time
pursuant to paragraph 3 of subsection A of
Section 5-208 of this title;

14.  “Petitioner” means a person who files a petition alleging
that an individual is a person requiring treatment or an assisted
outpatient;
15.  “Executive director” means the person in charge of a
facility as defined in this section;
16.  “Private hospital or facility” means any general hospital
maintaining a neuro-psychiatric unit or ward, or any private
hospital or facility for care and treatment of a person having a
mental illness, which is not supported by the state or federal
government.  The term “private hospital” or “facility” shall not
include nursing homes or other facilities maintained primarily for
the care of elderly and disabled persons;
17.  “Individualized treatment plan” means a proposal developed
during the stay of an individual in a facility, under the provisions
of this title, which is specifically tailored to the treatment needs
of the individual.  Each plan shall clearly include the following:
a. a statement of treatment goals or objectives, based
upon and related to a clinical evaluation, which can
be reasonably achieved within a designated time
interval,
b. treatment methods and procedures to be used to obtain
these goals, which methods and procedures are related
to each of these goals and which include specific
prognosis for achieving each of these goals,
c. identification of the types of professional personnel
who will carry out the treatment procedures including
appropriate medical or other professional involvement
by a physician or other health professional properly
qualified to fulfill legal requirements mandated under
state and federal law,
d. documentation of involvement by the individual
receiving treatment and, if applicable, the accordance
of the individual with the treatment plan, and
e. a statement attesting that the executive director of
the facility or clinical director has made a
reasonable effort to meet the plan’s individualized
treatment goals in the least restrictive environment
possible closest to the home community of the
individual;
18.  “Telemedicine” means technology-enabled health and care
management and delivery systems that extend capacity and access,
which includes:
a. synchronous mechanisms, which may include live
audiovisual interaction between a patient and a health
care professional or real-time provider to provider
consultation through live interactive audiovisual
means,

b. asynchronous mechanisms, which include store and
forward transfers, online exchange of health
information between a patient and a health care
professional and online exchange of health information
between health care professionals, but shall not
include the use of automated text messages or
automated mobile applications that serve as the sole
interaction between a patient and a health care
professional,
c. remote patient monitoring, and
d. other electronic means that support clinical health
care, professional consultation, patient and
professional health-related education, public health
and health administration;
19.  “Recovery and recovery support” means nonclinical services
that assist individuals and families to recover from alcohol or drug
problems.  They include social support, linkage to and coordination
among allied service providers including but not limited to
transportation to and from treatment or employment, employment
services and job training, case management and individual services
coordination, life skills education, relapse prevention, housing
assistance, child care, and substance abuse education;
20.  “Assisted outpatient” means a person who:
a. is either currently under the care of a facility
certified by the Department of Mental Health and
Substance Abuse Services as a community mental health
center, or is being discharged from the custody of the
Department of Corrections, or is being discharged from
a residential placement by the Office of Juvenile
Affairs,
b. is suffering from a mental illness,
c. is unlikely to survive safely in the community without
supervision, based on a clinical determination,
d. has a history of lack of compliance with treatment for
mental illness that has:
(1) prior to the filing of a petition, at least twice
within the last thirty-six (36) months been a
significant factor in necessitating
hospitalization or treatment in a hospital or
residential facility including admission to a
community-based structured crisis center as
certified by the Department of Mental Health and
Substance Abuse Services, or receipt of services
in a forensic or other mental health unit of a
correctional facility, or a specialized treatment
plan for treatment of mental illness in a secure

juvenile facility or placement in a specialized
residential program for juveniles, or
(2) prior to the filing of the petition, resulted in
one or more acts of serious violent behavior
toward self or others or threats of, or attempts
at, serious physical harm to self or others
within the last twenty-four (24) months,
e. is, as a result of his or her mental illness, unlikely
to voluntarily participate in outpatient treatment
that would enable him or her to live safely in the
community,
f. in view of his or her treatment history and current
behavior, is in need of assisted outpatient treatment
in order to prevent a relapse or deterioration which
would be likely to result in serious harm to the
person or persons, and
g. is likely to benefit from assisted outpatient
treatment;
21.  “Assisted outpatient treatment” means outpatient services
which have been ordered by the court pursuant to a treatment plan
approved by the court to treat an assisted outpatient’s mental
illness and to assist the person in living and functioning in the
community, or to attempt to prevent a relapse or deterioration that
may reasonably be predicted to result in suicide or the need for
hospitalization; and
22.  “Urgent recovery clinic” means a clinic that offers
voluntary services aimed at the assessment and immediate
stabilization of acute symptoms of mental illness, alcohol and other
drug abuse, and emotional distress.  Unless the person receiving
treatment consents to a longer duration or unless the person is
placed into emergency detention under Sections 5-206 through 5-209
of this title, no more than twenty-three (23) hours and fifty-nine
(59) minutes of services may be provided to a consumer during one
episode of care at an urgent recovery clinic.
Added by Laws 1953, p. 152, § 3, emerg. eff. June 3, 1953.  Amended
by Laws 1959, p. 185, § 1, emerg. eff. June 27, 1959; Laws 1963, c.
310, § 1, emerg. eff. June 19, 1963; Laws 1965, c. 32, § 1, emerg.
eff. March 3, 1965; Laws 1965, c. 381, § 1, emerg. eff. June 29,
1965; Laws 1977, c. 145, § 2, emerg. eff. June 3, 1977; Laws 1978,
c. 247, § 1, eff. Oct. 1, 1978; Laws 1980, c. 324, § 1, emerg. eff.
June 17, 1980; Laws 1986, c. 103, § 3, eff. Nov. 1, 1986.
Renumbered from § 3 of this title by Laws 1986, c. 103, § 103, eff.
Nov. 1, 1986.  Amended by Laws 1987, c. 118, § 2, operative July 1,
1987; Laws 1990, c. 51, § 23, emerg. eff. April 9, 1990; Laws 1992,
c. 389, § 1, emerg. eff. June 10, 1992; Laws 2001, c. 186, § 2, eff.
Nov. 1, 2001; Laws 2002, c. 488, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2002; Laws 2003,
c. 394, § 2; Laws 2005, c. 195, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2005; Laws 2006,

c. 16, § 18, emerg. eff. March 29, 2006; Laws 2006, c. 97, § 1, eff.
Nov. 1, 2006; Laws 2008, c. 401, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2008; Laws 2010,
c. 287, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2010; Laws 2011, c. 294, § 1, eff. Nov. 1,
2011; Laws 2013, c. 37, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2013; Laws 2013, c. 213, §
1, eff. Nov. 1, 2013; Laws 2015, c. 161, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2015;
Laws 2016, c. 177, § 2, eff. Nov. 1, 2016; Laws 2017, c. 246, § 1,
eff. Nov. 1, 2017; Laws 2019, c. 387, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2019; Laws
2019, c. 475, § 29, eff. Nov. 1, 2019; Laws 2021, c. 293, § 2, eff.
Nov. 1, 2021; Laws 2022, c. 297, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2022; Laws 2024,
c. 96, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2024; Laws 2025, c. 364, § 3, eff. Nov. 1,
2025.

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