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Article
What Can Parents Do? A Review of State Laws Regarding Decision Making for Adolescent Drug Abuse and Mental Health Treatment
Journal of Child & Adolescent Substance Abuse (2015)
  • Mary Louise E. Kerwin, Rowan University
  • Kimberly C. Kirby, Rowan University
  • Dominic Speziali
  • Morgan Duggan
  • Cynthia Mellitz
  • Brian Versek
  • Ashley McNamara
Abstract
This study examined U.S. state laws regarding parental and adolescent decision making for substance use and mental health inpatient and outpatient treatment. State statutes for requiring parental consent favored mental health over drug abuse treatment and inpatient over outpatient modalities. Parental consent was sufficient in 53% to 61% of the states for inpatient treatment, but only for 39% to 46% of the states for outpatient treatment. State laws favored the rights of minors to access drug treatment without parental consent, and to do so at a younger age than for mental health treatment. Implications for how these laws may impact parents seeking help for their children are discussed.
Keywords
  • consent,
  • decision-making authority,
  • state laws,
  • substance use,
  • treatment
Publication Date
May, 2015
DOI
10.1080/1067828X.2013.777380
Citation Information
Mary Louise E. Kerwin, Kimberly C. Kirby, Dominic Speziali, Morgan Duggan, et al.. "What Can Parents Do? A Review of State Laws Regarding Decision Making for Adolescent Drug Abuse and Mental Health Treatment" Journal of Child & Adolescent Substance Abuse Vol. 24 Iss. 3 (2015) p. 166 - 176 ISSN: 1067-828X
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/kimberly-kirby/2/