CONNECTICUT STATUTES AND CODES
Sec. 19a-550. (Formerly Sec. 19-622). Patients' bill of rights.
Sec. 19a-550. (Formerly Sec. 19-622). Patients' bill of rights. (a)(1) As used in
this section, (A) "nursing home facility" shall have the same meaning as provided in
section 19a-521, and (B) "chronic disease hospital" means a long-term hospital having
facilities, medical staff and all necessary personnel for the diagnosis, care and treatment
of chronic diseases; and (2) for the purposes of subsections (c) and (d) of this section, and
subsection (b) of section 19a-537, "medically contraindicated" means a comprehensive
evaluation of the impact of a potential room transfer on the patient's physical, mental
and psychosocial well-being, which determines that the transfer would cause new symptoms or exacerbate present symptoms beyond a reasonable adjustment period resulting
in a prolonged or significant negative outcome that could not be ameliorated through
care plan intervention, as documented by a physician in a patient's medical record.
(b) There is established a patients' bill of rights for any person admitted as a patient
to any nursing home facility or chronic disease hospital. The patients' bill of rights
shall be implemented in accordance with the provisions of Sections 1919(b), 1919(c),
1919(c)(2), 1919(c)(2)(D) and 1919(c)(2)(E) of the Social Security Act. The patients'
bill of rights shall provide that each such patient: (1) Is fully informed, as evidenced by
the patient's written acknowledgment, prior to or at the time of admission and during
the patient's stay, of the rights set forth in this section and of all rules and regulations
governing patient conduct and responsibilities; (2) is fully informed, prior to or at the
time of admission and during the patient's stay, of services available in the facility, and
of related charges including any charges for services not covered under Titles XVIII or
XIX of the Social Security Act, or not covered by basic per diem rate; (3) is entitled to
choose the patient's own physician and is fully informed, by a physician, of the patient's
medical condition unless medically contraindicated, as documented by the physician in
the patient's medical record, and is afforded the opportunity to participate in the planning
of the patient's medical treatment and to refuse to participate in experimental research;
(4) in a residential care home or a chronic disease hospital is transferred from one room
to another within the facility only for medical reasons, or for the patient's welfare or
that of other patients, as documented in the patient's medical record and such record
shall include documentation of action taken to minimize any disruptive effects of such
transfer, except a patient who is a Medicaid recipient may be transferred from a private
room to a nonprivate room, provided no patient may be involuntarily transferred from
one room to another within the facility if (A) it is medically established that the move
will subject the patient to a reasonable likelihood of serious physical injury or harm, or
(B) the patient has a prior established medical history of psychiatric problems and there
is psychiatric testimony that as a consequence of the proposed move there will be exacerbation of the psychiatric problem which would last over a significant period of time and
require psychiatric intervention; and in the case of an involuntary transfer from one
room to another within the facility, the patient and, if known, the patient's legally liable
relative, guardian or conservator or a person designated by the patient in accordance
with section 1-56r, is given at least thirty days' and no more than sixty days' written
notice to ensure orderly transfer from one room to another within the facility, except
where the health, safety or welfare of other patients is endangered or where immediate
transfer from one room to another within the facility is necessitated by urgent medical
need of the patient or where a patient has resided in the facility for less than thirty days,
in which case notice shall be given as many days before the transfer as practicable; (5) is
encouraged and assisted, throughout the patient's period of stay, to exercise the patient's
rights as a patient and as a citizen, and to this end, has the right to be fully informed
about patients' rights by state or federally funded patient advocacy programs, and may
voice grievances and recommend changes in policies and services to facility staff or to
outside representatives of the patient's choice, free from restraint, interference, coercion,
discrimination or reprisal; (6) shall have prompt efforts made by the facility to resolve
grievances the patient may have, including those with respect to the behavior of other
patients; (7) may manage the patient's personal financial affairs, and is given a quarterly
accounting of financial transactions made on the patient's behalf; (8) is free from mental
and physical abuse, corporal punishment, involuntary seclusion and any physical or
chemical restraints imposed for purposes of discipline or convenience and not required
to treat the patient's medical symptoms. Physical or chemical restraints may be imposed
only to ensure the physical safety of the patient or other patients and only upon the
written order of a physician that specifies the type of restraint and the duration and
circumstances under which the restraints are to be used, except in emergencies until a
specific order can be obtained; (9) is assured confidential treatment of the patient's
personal and medical records, and may approve or refuse their release to any individual
outside the facility, except in case of the patient's transfer to another health care institution or as required by law or third-party payment contract; (10) receives quality care
and services with reasonable accommodation of individual needs and preferences, except where the health or safety of the individual would be endangered, and is treated with
consideration, respect, and full recognition of the patient's dignity and individuality,
including privacy in treatment and in care for the patient's personal needs; (11) is not
required to perform services for the facility that are not included for therapeutic purposes
in the patient's plan of care; (12) may associate and communicate privately with persons
of the patient's choice, including other patients, send and receive the patient's personal
mail unopened and make and receive telephone calls privately, unless medically contraindicated, as documented by the patient's physician in the patient's medical record, and
receives adequate notice before the patient's room or roommate in the facility is changed;
(13) is entitled to organize and participate in patient groups in the facility and to participate in social, religious and community activities that do not interfere with the rights
of other patients, unless medically contraindicated, as documented by the patient's physician in the patient's medical records; (14) may retain and use the patient's personal
clothing and possessions unless to do so would infringe upon rights of other patients
or unless medically contraindicated, as documented by the patient's physician in the
patient's medical record; (15) is assured privacy for visits by the patient's spouse or a
person designated by the patient in accordance with section 1-56r and, if the patient is
married and both the patient and the patient's spouse are inpatients in the facility, they
are permitted to share a room, unless medically contraindicated, as documented by the
attending physician in the medical record; (16) is fully informed of the availability of
and may examine all current state, local and federal inspection reports and plans of
correction; (17) may organize, maintain and participate in a patient-run resident council,
as a means of fostering communication among residents and between residents and staff,
encouraging resident independence and addressing the basic rights of nursing home and
chronic disease hospital patients and residents, free from administrative interference or
reprisal; (18) is entitled to the opinion of two physicians concerning the need for surgery,
except in an emergency situation, prior to such surgery being performed; (19) is entitled
to have the patient's family or a person designated by the patient in accordance with
section 1-56r meet in the facility with the families of other patients in the facility to the
extent the facility has existing meeting space available which meets applicable building
and fire codes; (20) is entitled to file a complaint with the Department of Social Services
and the Department of Public Health regarding patient abuse, neglect or misappropriation of patient property; (21) is entitled to have psychopharmacologic drugs administered only on orders of a physician and only as part of a written plan of care developed
in accordance with Section 1919(b)(2) of the Social Security Act and designed to eliminate or modify the symptoms for which the drugs are prescribed and only if, at least
annually, an independent external consultant reviews the appropriateness of the drug
plan; (22) is entitled to be transferred or discharged from the facility only pursuant to
section 19a-535 or section 19a-535b, as applicable; (23) is entitled to be treated equally
with other patients with regard to transfer, discharge and the provision of all services
regardless of the source of payment; (24) shall not be required to waive any rights to
benefits under Medicare or Medicaid or to give oral or written assurance that the patient
is not eligible for, or will not apply for benefits under Medicare or Medicaid; (25) is
entitled to be provided information by the facility as to how to apply for Medicare or
Medicaid benefits and how to receive refunds for previous payments covered by such
benefits; (26) on or after October 1, 1990, shall not be required to give a third party
guarantee of payment to the facility as a condition of admission to, or continued stay
in, the facility; (27) in the case of an individual who is entitled to medical assistance,
is entitled to have the facility not charge, solicit, accept or receive, in addition to any
amount otherwise required to be paid under Medicaid, any gift, money, donation or
other consideration as a precondition of admission or expediting the admission of the
individual to the facility or as a requirement for the individual's continued stay in the
facility; and (28) shall not be required to deposit the patient's personal funds in the
facility.
(c) The patients' bill of rights shall provide that a patient in a rest home with nursing
supervision or a chronic and convalescent nursing home may be transferred from one
room to another within a facility only for the purpose of promoting the patient's well-being, except as provided pursuant to subparagraph (C) or (D) of this subsection or
subsection (d) of this section. Whenever a patient is to be transferred, the facility shall
effect the transfer with the least disruption to the patient and shall assess, monitor and
adjust care as needed subsequent to the transfer in accordance with subdivision (10) of
subsection (b) of this section. When a transfer is initiated by the facility and the patient
does not consent to the transfer, the facility shall establish a consultative process that
includes the participation of the attending physician, a registered nurse with responsibility for the patient and other appropriate staff in disciplines as determined by the patient's
needs, and the participation of the patient, the patient's family, a person designated by
the patient in accordance with section 1-56r or other representative. The consultative
process shall determine: (1) What caused consideration of the transfer; (2) whether the
cause can be removed; and (3) if not, whether the facility has attempted alternatives to
transfer. The patient shall be informed of the risks and benefits of the transfer and of
any alternatives. If subsequent to the completion of the consultative process a patient
still does not wish to be transferred, the patient may be transferred without the patient's
consent, unless medically contraindicated, only (A) if necessary to accomplish physical
plant repairs or renovations that otherwise could not be accomplished; provided, if practicable, the patient, if the patient wishes, shall be returned to the patient's room when
the repairs or renovations are completed; (B) due to irreconcilable incompatibility between or among roommates, which is actually or potentially harmful to the well-being
of a patient; (C) if the facility has two vacancies available for patients of the same sex
in different rooms, there is no applicant of that sex pending admission in accordance
with the requirements of section 19a-533 and grouping of patients by the same sex in
the same room would allow admission of patients of the opposite sex, which otherwise
would not be possible; (D) if necessary to allow access to specialized medical equipment
no longer needed by the patient and needed by another patient; or (E) if the patient no
longer needs the specialized services or programming that is the focus of the area of the
facility in which the patient is located. In the case of an involuntary transfer, the facility
shall, subsequent to completion of the consultative process, provide the patient and the
patient's legally liable relative, guardian or conservator if any or other responsible party
if known, with at least fifteen days' written notice of the transfer, which shall include
the reason for the transfer, the location to which the patient is being transferred, and the
name, address and telephone number of the regional long-term care ombudsman, except
that in the case of a transfer pursuant to subparagraph (A) of this subsection at least
thirty days' notice shall be provided. Notwithstanding the provisions of this subsection,
a patient may be involuntarily transferred immediately from one room to another within
a facility to protect the patient or others from physical harm, to control the spread of
an infectious disease, to respond to a physical plant or environmental emergency that
threatens the patient's health or safety or to respond to a situation that presents a patient
with an immediate danger of death or serious physical harm. In such a case, disruption
of patients shall be minimized; the required notice shall be provided within twenty-four
hours after the transfer; if practicable, the patient, if the patient wishes, shall be returned
to the patient's room when the threat to health or safety which prompted the transfer
has been eliminated; and, in the case of a transfer effected to protect a patient or others
from physical harm, the consultative process shall be established on the next business
day.
(d) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (c) of this section, unless medically contraindicated, a patient who is a Medicaid recipient may be transferred from a
private to a nonprivate room. In the case of such a transfer, the facility shall (1) give at
least thirty days' written notice to the patient and the patient's legally liable relative,
guardian or conservator, if any, a person designated by the patient in accordance with
section 1-56r or other responsible party, if known, which notice shall include the reason
for the transfer, the location to which the patient is being transferred and the name,
address and telephone number of the regional long-term care ombudsman; and (2) establish a consultative process to effect the transfer with the least disruption to the patient
and assess, monitor and adjust care as needed subsequent to the transfer in accordance
with subdivision (10) of subsection (b) of this section. The consultative process shall
include the participation of the attending physician, a registered nurse with responsibility
for the patient and other appropriate staff in disciplines as determined by the patient's
needs, and the participation of the patient, the patient's family, a person designated by
the patient in accordance with section 1-56r or other representative.
(e) Any facility that negligently deprives a patient of any right or benefit created
or established for the well-being of the patient by the provisions of this section shall be
liable to such patient in a private cause of action for injuries suffered as a result of such
deprivation. Upon a finding that a patient has been deprived of such a right or benefit,
and that the patient has been injured as a result of such deprivation, damages shall be
assessed in the amount sufficient to compensate such patient for such injury. In addition,
where the deprivation of any such right or benefit is found to have been wilful or in
reckless disregard of the rights of the patient, punitive damages may be assessed. A
patient may also maintain an action pursuant to this section for any other type of relief,
including injunctive and declaratory relief, permitted by law. Exhaustion of any available administrative remedies shall not be required prior to commencement of suit under
this section.
(f) In addition to the rights specified in subsections (b), (c) and (d) of this section,
a patient in a nursing home facility is entitled to have the facility manage the patient's
funds as provided in section 19a-551.
(P.A. 75-468, S. 12, 17; P.A. 76-331, S. 15, 16; P.A. 79-265, S. 2; 79-378; P.A. 80-80; 80-120; P.A. 86-11; P.A. 89-348, S. 4, 10; P.A. 92-231, S. 3, 10; P.A. 93-262, S. 1, 87; 93-327, S. 3; 93-381, S. 9, 39; P.A. 95-257, S. 12, 21, 58; P.A.
96-81, S. 1; P.A. 97-112, S. 2; P.A. 01-195, S. 161, 181; P.A. 02-105, S. 6; P.A. 04-158, S. 1.)
History: P.A. 76-331 rephrased Subdiv. (d) and added provision re transfer or discharge of private patient and added
Subdiv. (o) re availability of inspection reports; P.A. 79-265 specified that 30 days' notice is applicable to involuntary
transfers or discharges and required notification of personal physician if discharge plan prepared by nursing home medical
director under Subdiv. (d); P.A. 79-378 changed alphabetic Subdiv. indicators to numeric indicators and added Subsec.
(b) re nursing homes liability if patient not notified of rights and benefits; P.A. 80-80 added Subdiv. (16) in Subsec. (a) re
patient-run resident council; P.A. 80-120 added Subdiv. (17) re medical opinions concerning surgery; Sec. 19-622 transferred to Sec. 19a-550 in 1983; P.A. 86-11 applied provisions to chronic disease patients and defined "chronic disease
hospital"; P.A. 89-348 inserted new Subsec. (a) defining "nursing home facility" and "chronic disease hospital", relettered
the remaining Subsecs., amended Subsec. (b) to expand patients' rights and added Subdivs. (18) to (28) re patients' rights
and added a new Subsec. (d) re the management of funds; P.A. 92-231 amended Subsec. (b) by requiring implementation
of bill of rights in accordance with Sections 1919(c)(2), 1919(c)(2)(D) and 1919(c)(2)(E) of the Social Security Act and
providing that a patient who is a Medicaid recipient may be transferred from a private to a nonprivate room unless such
transfer would present imminent danger of death; P.A. 93-262 authorized substitution of commissioner and department
of social services for commissioner and department on aging, effective July 1, 1993; P.A. 93-327 amended Subsec. (b) to
replace imminent danger of death standard with new Subdivs. (A) re reasonable likelihood of serious physical harm and
(B) re exacerbation of psychiatric problems and to provide notice of transfer no more than 60 days prior to transfer; P.A.
93-381 replaced department of health services with department of public health and addiction services, effective July 1,
1993; P.A. 95-257 replaced Commissioner and Department of Public Health and Addiction Services with Commissioner
and Department of Public Health, effective July 1, 1995; P.A. 96-81 amended Subsec. (a) to define "medically contraindicated", amended Subsec. (b)(4) to specify applicability to patients "in a home for the aged or a chronic disease hospital"
and added Subsecs. (c) and (d) re the establishment of a consultative process, conditions for nonconsensual transfers and
emergency transfers, relettering Subsecs. (c) and (d) as (e) and (f) (Revisor's note: The Revisors editorially (1) substituted
the word "and" for a comma in Subsec. (c) in the phrase "... a registered nurse with responsibility for the patient and other
appropriate staff ...", (2) deleted the word "such" in Subsec. (c)(E) in the phrase "... at least thirty days' notice shall ...",
and (3) substituted the word "and" for a comma in Subsec. (d)(2) in the phrase "... a registered nurse with responsibility
for the patient and other appropriate staff ..."); P.A. 97-112 replaced "home for the aged" with "residential care home";
P.A. 01-195 made technical changes in Subsecs. (a) to (d) and (f), effective July 11, 2001; P.A. 02-105 amended Subsec.
(b)(4)(B) by adding that notice of involuntary transfer may be given to a person designated by patient in accordance with
Sec. 1-56r, amended Subsec. (b)(15) by adding that patient is assured of private visits with such a designated person and
that if patient is married and both patient and spouse are inmates they are permitted to share a room unless medically
contraindicated, amended Subsec. (b)(19) by adding that such designated person may meet in the facility with the families
of other patients, amended Subsec. (c) by adding that if patient does not consent to a transfer initiated by the facility the
consultation process may include such a designated person, amended Subsec. (d) by adding that in the case of the transfer
of a Medicaid recipient from a private to a nonprivate room, notice may be given to such a designated person, and by
adding that the consultative process may include such a designated person; P.A. 04-158 amended Subsec. (b) to reference
Sections 1919(b) and 1919(c) of the Social Security Act re implementation of the patients' bill of rights, amended Subsec.
(b)(5) re "right to be fully informed about patients' rights by state or federally funded patient advocacy programs", amended
Subsec. (b)(10) to substitute "receives quality care and services" for "receives services", and amended Subsec. (b)(21) to
add "developed in accordance with Section 1919(b)(2) of the Social Security Act" re a written plan of care.
Connecticut Patients' Bill of Rights mirrors framework set forth in federal Medicaid Act. 76 CA 800.
Subsec. (b):
Connecticut Patients' Bill of Rights prohibits nursing facility from requiring third party guarantee of payment to the
facility as condition of admission (or expedited admission) to, or continued stay in, the facility. 76 CA 800.