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Using Consent Forms Santa Fe NM

When a rehab program that offers assessment and treatment for substance abuse asks a family member (including a parent), partner, employer, school, or doctor to verify information it has obtained from the client, it is making a disclosure that the client has sought help for substance abuse.

Ayudantes Inc
(505) 438-0035
1316 Apache Avenue
Santa Fe, NM
Presbyterian Medical Services
(505) 986-9633
2960 Rodeo Park West
Santa Fe, NM
Socorro Mental Health Inc
(575) 835-2444
1200 Highway 60 West
Socorro, NM
Border Area Mental Health Services Inc
(575) 546-2174
901 West Hickory Street
Deming, NM
Los Alamos Family Council Inc
(505) 662-4130
1505 15th Street
Los Alamos, NM
Santa Fe Recovery Center
(505) 471-4985
4100 Lucia Lane
Santa Fe, NM
Life Link
(505) 438-0010
2325 Cerrillos Road
Santa Fe, NM
Recovery Services of New Mexico
1528 Five Points Road
Albuquerque, NM
Rehoboth McKinley Christian Hospital
(505) 726-6900
650 Vanden Bosch Parkway
Gallup, NM
Pueblo of San Felipe
(505) 867-9740
25 Cougar Road
San Felipe PB, NM
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Using Consent Forms

Using Consent Forms

The fact that a client has signed a valid consent form authorizing the release of information does not mean that a program must make the proposed disclosure, unless the program has also received a subpoena or court order (§§2.3(b)(1); 2.61(a)(b)). In most cases, the decision whether to make a disclosure authorized by a client’s signed consent is up to the program, unless State law requires or prohibits a particular disclosure once consent is given. The program’s only obligation under the Federal regulations is to refuse to honor a consent that is expired, deficient, or otherwise known to be revoked, false, or incorrect (§2.31(c)).

In general, it is best to follow this rule: Disclose only what is necessary, for only as long as is necessary, keeping in mind the purpose for disclosing the information.

Using consent forms to seek information from collateral sources

Making inquiries of families, partners, schools, employers, doctors, and other health care providers might, at first glance, seem to pose no risk to a client’s right to confidentiality. But it does.

When a program that offers assessment and treatment for substance abuse asks a family member (including a parent), partner, employer, school, or doctor to verify information it has obtained from the client, it is making a disclosure that the client has sought help for substance abuse. The Federal regulations generally prohibit this kind of disclosure unless the clie...

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