Oklahoma Code § 63-3105.5

Title 63. Public Health And Safety: Physician not subject to liability or discipline –
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Liability for falsification of form – Temporary court orders.
A.  A physician or other health care provider acting in good
faith and in accordance with reasonable medical standards applicable
to the physician or other health care provider is not subject to
civil or criminal liability or to discipline for unprofessional
conduct for:
1.  Executing an Oklahoma standardized format physician orders
for life-sustaining treatment form in compliance with a health care
decision of a person apparently having authority to make a health
care decision for a patient, including a decision to provide,
withhold or withdraw health care;
2.  Declining to execute an Oklahoma standardized format
physician orders for life-sustaining treatment form in compliance
with a health care decision of a person based on a reasonable belief
that the person then lacked authority; or
3.  Complying with an apparently valid Oklahoma standardized
format physician orders for life-sustaining treatment form on the
assumption that the order was valid when made and has not been
revoked or terminated.
B.  A person who intentionally falsifies, forges, conceals,
defaces or obliterates an individual's physician orders for life-
sustaining treatment form without the individual's consent, or who

coerces or fraudulently induces an individual to give, revoke or not
to give a physician orders for life-sustaining treatment form, is
subject to liability to that individual for damages of Two Hundred
Thousand Dollars ($200,000.00) or actual damages resulting from the
action, whichever is greater, plus reasonable attorney fees.
C.  On petition of a health care provider or facility involved
with the patient's care, the patient or the patient's custodial
parent or guardian, attorney-in-fact, guardian or health care proxy,
or other person who has authority to make health care decisions for
the patient under common law, any court of competent jurisdiction
may enjoin or direct a health care decision related to a physician
orders for life-sustaining treatment form or order other appropriate
equitable relief.  The court shall issue such temporary orders as
necessary to preserve the life of the patient pending a final
judgment in such litigation, including any appeals.

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