Arizona Laws 36-2023. Rules
A. The department shall adopt and enforce rules to establish standards for approved public and private treatment facilities that must be met for a treatment facility to be approved. The department periodically shall inspect approved facilities at reasonable times and in a reasonable manner. Each approved public and private treatment facility shall file with the department on request information the department requires pursuant to rule. The department shall remove from the list of approved treatment facilities a facility that without good cause fails to furnish information as requested or that files fraudulent information.
Terms Used In Arizona Laws 36-2023
- Administration: means the Arizona health care cost containment system administration. See Arizona Laws 36-2021
- center: means an initial reception agency for a person who is intoxicated or who is incapacitated by alcohol to receive initial evaluation and processing for assignment for further evaluation or into a treatment program. See Arizona Laws 36-2021
- Department: means the department of health services. See Arizona Laws 36-2021
- Evaluation: means a multidisciplinary professional analysis of a person's medical, psychological, social, financial and legal conditions. See Arizona Laws 36-2021
- Fiscal year: The fiscal year is the accounting period for the government. For the federal government, this begins on October 1 and ends on September 30. The fiscal year is designated by the calendar year in which it ends; for example, fiscal year 2006 begins on October 1, 2005 and ends on September 30, 2006.
- Incapacitated by alcohol: means that a person as a result of the use of alcohol is unconscious or has judgment otherwise so impaired that the person is incapable of realizing and making a rational decision with respect to the person's need for evaluation and treatment, is unable to take care of basic personal needs or safety such as food, clothing, shelter or medical care or lacks sufficient understanding or capacity to make or communicate rational decisions. See Arizona Laws 36-2021
- including: means not limited to and is not a term of exclusion. See Arizona Laws 1-215
- Intoxicated person: means a person whose mental or physical functioning is substantially impaired as a result of the immediate effects of alcohol in the person's system. See Arizona Laws 36-2021
- Person: includes a corporation, company, partnership, firm, association or society, as well as a natural person. See Arizona Laws 1-215
- Population: means the population according to the most recent United States decennial census. See Arizona Laws 1-215
- Treatment: means the broad range of emergency, outpatient, intermediate and inpatient services and care, including diagnostic evaluation, medical, psychiatric, psychological and social service care, vocational rehabilitation and career counseling, which may be extended to alcoholics and intoxicated persons. See Arizona Laws 36-2021
B. The department in compliance with subsection A of this section shall adopt and may amend or repeal rules for the acceptance of persons into a treatment program, in light of the available treatment resources and facilities, with a view to the early and effective provision of evaluation and treatment for alcoholics and intoxicated persons. In establishing the rules, the department shall be guided by the following standards:
1. An intoxicated person or person incapacitated by alcohol, who voluntarily seeks treatment or who is transported to an approved facility by a peace officer or other person, shall be initially brought to and evaluated at a local alcoholism reception center.
2. A person shall receive an initial evaluation.
3. A patient shall be initially assigned or transferred to outpatient treatment or intermediate treatment, unless the person is found to require inpatient treatment.
4. A person shall not be denied treatment solely because the person has withdrawn from treatment against medical advice on a prior occasion or because the person has relapsed after earlier treatment.
5. An individualized treatment plan shall be prepared and maintained on a current basis for each patient.
6. Provision shall be made for a continuum of coordinated treatment services, so that a person who leaves the facility or another form of treatment will have available and use other appropriate treatment.
C. The administration shall:
1. Enlist the assistance of all public and private agencies, organizations and individuals engaged in the prevention of alcoholism and treatment of alcoholics and intoxicated persons at approved public and private facilities.
2. Cooperate with the state department of corrections in establishing and conducting programs to provide treatment for alcoholics in penal institutions and alcoholics on parole or community supervision from penal institutions at approved public and private facilities.
3. Cooperate with the department of education, schools, police departments, courts and other public and private agencies, organizations and individuals in establishing programs for the prevention of alcoholism and treatment of alcoholics and intoxicated persons and in preparing curriculum materials for use at all levels of school education.
4. Specify a uniform method for keeping statistical information by approved public and private treatment facilities and collect and make available relevant statistical information, including the number of persons treated, frequency of admission, and readmission and frequency and duration of treatment.
5. Cooperate with the department of transportation in establishing and conducting programs designed to deal with the problem of persons operating motor vehicles while intoxicated.
6. Prepare an annual report on drug abuse treatment programs in this state that receive monies from the administration to be submitted by January 1 of each year to the governor, the president of the senate and the speaker of the house of representatives and to be made available to the general public through the Arizona drug and gang prevention resource center. The report shall include:
(a) The name and location of each program.
(b) The amount and sources of funding for each program.
(c) The number of clients who received services during the preceding fiscal year.
(d) A description of the demographic characteristics of the client population served by each program, including age groups, gender and ethnicity.
(e) A description of client problems addressed by the programs, including the types of substances abused.
(f) A summary of the numbers and types of services available and provided during the preceding fiscal year.
(g) An evaluation of the results achieved by the programs.