Oklahoma Code § 43A-1-109

Title 43A. Mental Health: Confidential and privileged information - Disclosure
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A.  1.  All mental health and drug or alcohol abuse treatment
information, whether or not recorded, and all communications between
a physician or licensed mental health professional as defined in
Section 1-103 of this title, or a licensed alcohol and drug
counselor as defined in Section 1871 of Title 59 of the Oklahoma
Statutes, and a consumer are both privileged and confidential.  In
addition, the identity of all persons who have received or are
receiving mental health or drug or alcohol abuse treatment services
shall be considered confidential and privileged.
2.  Such information shall only be available to persons actively
engaged in the treatment of the consumer or in related
administrative work.  The information available to persons actively
engaged in the treatment of the consumer or in related
administrative work shall be limited to the minimum amount of
information necessary for the person or agency to carry out its
function.
3.  Except as otherwise provided in this section, such
information shall not be disclosed to anyone not involved in the
treatment of the patient or related administrative work.
B.  A person who is or has been a consumer of a physician, a
licensed mental health professional as defined in Section 1-103 of
this title, a licensed alcohol and drug counselor as defined in
Section 1871 of Title 59 of the Oklahoma Statutes, a mental health
facility, a drug or alcohol abuse treatment facility or service, or
other agency for the purpose of mental health or drug or alcohol
abuse care and treatment, or such person’s treatment advocate as
defined in Section 1-109.1 of this title, shall be entitled to
personal access to his or her mental health or drug or alcohol abuse
treatment information, except the following:
1.  Information contained in notes recorded in any medium by a
mental health professional documenting or analyzing the contents of
conversation during a private counseling session or a group, joint
or family counseling session, and that is separated from the rest of
the patient's medical record;
2.  Information compiled in reasonable anticipation of or for
use in a civil, criminal or administrative action or proceeding;
3.  Information that is otherwise privileged or prohibited from
disclosure by law;
4.  Information the person in charge of the care and treatment
of the patient determines to be reasonably likely to endanger the
life or physical safety of the patient or another person;
5.  Information created or obtained as part of research that
includes treatment; provided, the patient consented to the temporary
suspension of access while the research is ongoing.  The patient's
right of access shall resume upon completion of the research;

6.  Information requested by an inmate that a correctional
institution has determined may jeopardize the health, safety,
security, custody or rehabilitation of the inmate or other person;
and
7.  Information obtained under a promise of confidentiality and
the access requested would be reasonably likely to reveal the source
of the information.
C.  1.  A valid written release for disclosure of mental health
or drug or alcohol abuse treatment information shall have, at a
minimum, the following elements:
a. the specific name or general designation of the
program or person permitted to make the disclosure,
b. the name or title of the individual or the name of the
organization to which disclosure is to be made,
c. the name of the consumer whose records are to be
released,
d. the purpose of the disclosure,
e. a description of the information to be disclosed,
f. the dated signature of the consumer or authorized
representative or both when required,
g. a statement of the right of the consumer to revoke the
release in writing and a description of how the
consumer may do so,
h. an expiration date, event or condition which, if not
revoked before, shall ensure the release will last no
longer than reasonably necessary to serve the purpose
for which it is given, and
i. if the release is signed by a person authorized to act
for a consumer, a description of the authority of such
person to act.
2.  A release is not valid if the document submitted has any of
the following defects:
a. the expiration date has passed or the expiration event
or condition is known to have occurred or to exist,
b. the release has not been filled out completely with
respect to an element described in paragraph 1 of this
section,
c. the release is known to have been revoked, or
d. any material information in the release is known to be
false.
3.  A revocation of a release as provided in this section shall
be in writing and may be made at any time, except when:
a. information has already been released in reliance
thereon,
b. the authorization was obtained as a condition of
obtaining insurance coverage and other law provides

the insurer with the right to contest a claim under
the policy or the policy itself, or
c. the release was executed as part of a criminal justice
referral.
4.  Disclosure regarding a deceased consumer shall require
either a court order or a written release of an executor,
administrator or personal representative appointed by the court, or
if there is no such appointment, by the spouse of the consumer or,
if none, by any responsible member of the family of the consumer.
As used in this paragraph, "responsible family member" means the
parent, adult child, adult sibling or other adult relative who was
actively involved in providing care to or monitoring the care of the
patient as verified by the physician, psychologist or other person
responsible for the care and treatment of such person.
D.  Except as otherwise permitted, mental health and alcohol or
substance abuse treatment information may not be disclosed without
valid patient authorization or a valid court order issued by a court
of competent jurisdiction.  For purposes of this section, a subpoena
by itself is not sufficient to authorize disclosure of mental health
and alcohol or substance abuse treatment information.
E.  An authorization shall not be required for the following
uses and disclosures, but information disclosed pursuant to one of
these exceptions must be limited to the minimum amount of
information necessary:
1.  Disclosure by a health care provider of mental health
information necessary to carry out another provider's own treatment,
payment, or health care operations.  Such disclosures shall be
limited to mental health information and shall not include substance
abuse information;
2.  Communications to law enforcement officers regarding
information directly related to the commission of a crime on the
premises of a facility or against facility personnel, or a threat to
commit such a crime.  Such communications involving persons with
substance abuse disorders shall be limited to the circumstances
surrounding the incident, consumer status, name and address of that
individual and the last-known whereabouts of that individual;
3.  A review preparatory to research, research on decedents
information or research conducted when a waiver of authorization has
been approved by either an institutional review board or privacy
board;
4.  Communications pursuant to a business associate agreement,
qualified service organization agreement or a qualified service
organization/business associate agreement.  As used in this
paragraph:
a. "business associate agreement" means a written signed
agreement between a health care provider and an
outside entity which performs or assists in the

performance of a function or activity involving the
use or disclosure of individually identifiable health
information on behalf of the health care provider,
b. "qualified service organization agreement" means a
written, signed agreement between a health care
provider and an outside entity which provides services
to the health care provider's consumers that are
different from the services provided by the health
care provider, that allows the health care provider to
communicate consumer information necessary for the
outside entity to provide services to the health care
provider's consumers without the need for an
authorization signed by a consumer and in which the
outside entity acknowledges that in receiving,
storing, processing or otherwise dealing with any
consumer information from the health care provider it
is fully bound by the provisions of 42 C.F.R., Part 2
and, if necessary, will resist any efforts in judicial
proceedings to obtain access to consumer information,
except as permitted by 42 C.F.R., Part 2, and
c. "qualified service organization/business agreement"
means a written, signed agreement between a health
care provider and an outside entity which provides
services to the health care provider's consumers that
are different from the services provided by the health
care provider, that allows the health care provider to
communicate consumer information necessary for the
outside entity to provide services to the health care
provider's consumers without the need for an
authorization signed by a consumer, and in which the
outside entity acknowledges that in receiving,
storing, processing or otherwise dealing with any
consumer information from the health care provider it
is fully bound by the provisions 42 C.F.R., Part 2
and, if necessary, will resist any efforts in judicial
proceedings to obtain access to consumer information,
except as permitted by 42 C.F.R., Part 2.  The
agreement must also contain elements required by
federal privacy regulations in 45 C.F.R., Parts 160 &
164;
5.  Reporting under state law incidents of suspected child abuse
or neglect to the appropriate authorities; provided, however, for
disclosures involving an individual with a substance abuse disorder,
this exception does not allow for follow-up communications;
6.  Disclosure of consumer-identifying information to medical
personnel who have a need for information about a consumer for the
purpose of treating a condition which poses an immediate threat to

the health of any individual and which requires immediate medical
intervention;
7.  Communications necessary for audit and evaluation
activities;
8.  When a program or facility director determines that an adult
person with a substance abuse disorder has a medical condition which
prevents the person from "knowing or effective action on his or her
own behalf", the program or facility director may authorize
disclosures for the sole purpose of obtaining payment for services.
If the person has been adjudicated incompetent, the facility must
seek permission to disclose information for payment from the legal
guardian;
9.  Reporting of such information as otherwise required by law;
provided, however, such disclosure may not identify the person
directly or indirectly as a person with a substance abuse disorder;
10.  Communications to coroners, medical examiners and funeral
directors for the purpose of identifying a deceased person,
determining a cause of death, or other duties as authorized by law
and as necessary to carry out their duties; provided, however, such
disclosure may not identify the person directly or indirectly as a
person with a substance abuse disorder;
11.  Communications to organ procurement organizations or other
entities engaged in procurement, banking, or transplantation of
cadaveric organs, eyes or tissue for the purpose of facilitating
organ, eye or tissue donation and transplantation; provided,
however, such disclosure may not identify the person directly or
indirectly as a person with a substance abuse disorder;
12.  Disclosure to professional licensure boards investigating
alleged unethical behavior towards a patient; provided, however,
such disclosure may not identify the person directly or indirectly
as a person with a substance abuse disorder;
13.  Disclosure to the parent of a minor for the purpose of
notifying the parent of the location of his or her child; provided,
however, such disclosure may not identify the person directly or
indirectly as a person with a substance abuse disorder;
14.  Mental health records may be disclosed to parties in a
judicial or administrative proceeding in cases involving a claim for
personal injury or death against any practitioner of the healing
arts, a licensed hospital, or a nursing facility or nursing home
licensed pursuant to Section 1-1903 of Title 63 of the Oklahoma
Statutes arising out of patient care, where any person has placed
the physical or mental condition of that person in issue by the
commencement of any action, proceeding, or suit for damages, or
where any person has placed in issue the physical or mental
condition of any other person or deceased person by or through whom
the person rightfully claims;

15.  Disclosure of consumer-identifying information when it
appears from all the circumstances that the individual has escaped
from a correctional institution or from lawful custody and the
release is to a law enforcement authority for the purpose of
identification and apprehension.  Such disclosures shall be limited
to mental health information and shall not include substance abuse
information; and
16.  When failure to disclose the information presents a serious
threat to the health and safety of a person or the public; provided,
however, such disclosure may not identify the person directly or
indirectly as a person with a substance abuse disorder.
Added by Laws 1987, c. 168, § 3, eff. Nov. 1, 1987.  Amended by Laws
1990, c. 51, § 25, emerg. eff. April 9, 1990; Laws 1991, c. 102, §
1, eff. Sept. 1, 1991; Laws 1992, c. 298, § 41, eff. July 1, 1993;
Laws 1997, c. 195, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 1997; Laws 2002, c. 488, § 3,
eff. Nov. 1, 2002; Laws 2003, c. 46, § 4, emerg. eff. April 8, 2003;
Laws 2003, c. 196, § 1, emerg. eff. May 7, 2003; Laws 2004, c. 113,
§ 3, eff. Nov. 1, 2004; Laws 2005, c. 195, § 3, eff. Nov. 1, 2005;
Laws 2006, c. 16, § 20, emerg. eff. March 29, 2006; Laws 2006, c.
97, § 2, eff. Nov. 1, 2006; Laws 2008, c. 401, § 2, eff. Nov. 1,
2008; Laws 2013, c. 37, § 2, eff. Nov. 1, 2013; Laws 2013, c. 155, §
1, eff. Nov. 1, 2013.
NOTE:  Laws 2004, c. 168, § 6 repealed by Laws 2005, c. 195, § 29,
eff. Nov. 1, 2005, without reference to amendment by Laws 2005, c.
150, § 5.  Laws 2005, c. 150, § 5 repealed by Laws 2006, c. 16, §
21, emerg. eff. March 29, 2006.

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