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Code · New Mexico · Chapter 43 — Commitment Procedures · Article 1 — Mental Health And Developmental Disabilities

43-1-14. Voluntary admission to residential treatment or

289 words·~1 min read·/nm/chapter-43-commitment-procedures/article-1-mental-health-and-developmental-disabilities/43-1-14·

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habilitation.
A. A person may voluntarily seek admission to residential treatment or habilitation.
B. A guardian appointed under the Uniform Probate Code [Chapter 45 NMSA 1978], an agent or surrogate under the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act [Chapter 24, Article 7A NMSA 1978] or an agent under the Mental Health Care Treatment Decisions Act [Chapter 24, Article 7B NMSA 1978] shall not consent to the admission of an individual to a mental health care facility. If a guardian has full power or limited power that includes medical or mental health treatment or, if the individual's written advance health- care directive or advance directive for mental health treatment expressly permits treatment in a mental health care facility, the guardian, agent or surrogate may present the person to a facility only for evaluation for admission pursuant to Subsection E of Section 43-1-10 NMSA 1978.
C. Nothing in this section shall be construed as depriving voluntary clients of any right given to involuntary clients.
D. A client voluntarily admitted to residential treatment or habilitation has the right to immediate discharge from the residential facility upon request, unless the director of the facility or a physician determines that the client requires continued confinement and meets the criteria for involuntary residential treatment or habilitation under the code. If the director or physician so determines, the director or physician shall, on the first business day following the client's request for release, request the district attorney to initiate commitment proceedings under the code.
The client has a right to a hearing on the client's confinement within five days of the client's request for release.
History: 1953 Comp., § 34-2A-13, enacted by Laws 1977, ch. 279, § 13; 1978, ch. 161, § 8; 2009, ch. 159, § 17.
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