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H.B. 202 Enrolled
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MEDICAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
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CHILDREN
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2007 GENERAL SESSION
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STATE OF UTAH
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Chief Sponsor: Michael T. Morley
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Senate Sponsor:
D. Chris Buttars
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LONG TITLE
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General Description:
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This bill prohibits school personnel from making certain medical recommendations for
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a student, including the use of psychotropic medications, and prohibits removal of a
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child from parental custody based on a parent's refusal to consent to the administration
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of psychotropic medications.
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Highlighted Provisions:
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This bill:
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. prohibits school personnel from making certain medical recommendations for a
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student, including the use of psychotropic medications; and
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. prohibits the removal of a child from parental custody based on a parent's refusal to
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consent to the administration of psychotropic medications.
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Monies Appropriated in this Bill:
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None
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Other Special Clauses:
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None
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Utah Code Sections Affected:
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AMENDS:
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78-3a-301, as last amended by Chapters 13, 97 and 281, Laws of Utah 2006
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ENACTS:
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53A-11-605, Utah Code Annotated 1953
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Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
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Section 1.
Section
53A-11-605
is enacted to read:
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53A-11-605. Definitions -- School personnel -- Medical recommendations --
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Exceptions -- Penalties.
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(1) As used in this section:
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(a) "Health care professional" means a physician, physician assistant, nurse, dentist, or
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mental health therapist.
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(b) "School personnel" means any school district or charter school employee, including
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licensed, part-time, contract, and nonlicensed employees.
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(2) School personnel may:
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(a) provide information and observations to a student's parent or guardian about that
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student, including observations and concerns in the following areas:
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(i) progress;
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(ii) health and wellness;
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(iii) social interactions;
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(iv) behavior; or
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(v) topics consistent with Subsection
53A-13-302
(6);
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(b) communicate information and observations between school personnel regarding a
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child;
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(c) refer students to other appropriate school personnel and agents, consistent with
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local school board or charter school policy, including referrals and communication with a
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school counselor or other mental health professionals working within the school system;
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(d) consult or use appropriate health care professionals in the event of an emergency
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while the student is at school, consistent with the student emergency information provided at
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student enrollment;
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(e) exercise their authority relating to the placement within the school or readmission
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of a child who may be or has been suspended or expelled for a violation of Section
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53A-11-904
; and
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(f) complete a behavioral health evaluation form if requested by a student's parent or
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guardian to provide information to a licensed physician.
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(3) School personnel shall:
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(a) report suspected child abuse consistent with Section
62A-4a-403
;
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(b) comply with applicable state and local health department laws, rules, and policies;
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and
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(c) conduct evaluations and assessments consistent with the Individuals with
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Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. Sec. 1400 et seq., and its subsequent amendments.
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(4) Except as provided in Subsection (2) and Subsection (6), school personnel may not:
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(a) recommend to a parent or guardian that a child take or continue to take a
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psychotropic medication;
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(b) require that a student take or continue to take a psychotropic medication as a
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condition for attending school;
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(c) recommend that a parent or guardian seek or use a type of psychiatric or
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psychological treatment for a child;
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(d) conduct a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation or mental health screening,
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test, evaluation, or assessment of a child, except where this Subsection (4)(d) conflicts with the
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Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, 20 U.S.C. Sec. 1400 et seq., and its subsequent
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amendments; or
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(e) make a child abuse or neglect report to authorities, including the Division of Child
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and Family Services, solely or primarily on the basis that a parent or guardian refuses to
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consent to:
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(i) a psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for a child, including the
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administration of a psychotropic medication to a child; or
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(ii) a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child.
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(5) Notwithstanding Subsection (4)(e), school personnel may make a report that would
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otherwise be prohibited under Subsection (4)(e) if failure to take the action described under
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Subsection (4)(e) would present a serious, imminent risk to the child's safety or the safety of
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others.
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(6) Notwithstanding Subsection (4), a school counselor or other mental health
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professional acting in accordance with Title 58, Chapter 60, Mental Health Professional
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Practice Act, or licensed through the State Board of Education, working within the school
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system may:
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(a) recommend, but not require, a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child;
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(b) recommend, but not require, psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for
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a child;
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(c) conduct a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation or mental health screening,
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test, evaluation, or assessment of a child in accordance with Section
53A-13-302
; and
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(d) provide to a parent or guardian, upon the specific request of the parent or guardian,
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a list of three or more health care professionals or providers, including licensed physicians,
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psychologists, or other health specialists.
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(7) Local school boards or charter schools shall adopt a policy:
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(a) providing for training of appropriate school personnel on the provisions of this
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section; and
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(b) indicating that an intentional violation of this section is cause for disciplinary action
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consistent with local school board or charter school policy and under Section
53A-8-104
.
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(8) Nothing in this section shall be interpreted as discouraging general communication
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not prohibited by this section between school personnel and a student's parent or guardian.
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Section 2.
Section
78-3a-301
is amended to read:
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78-3a-301. Court-ordered protective custody of a child following petition filing --
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Grounds.
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(1) After a petition has been filed under Section
78-3a-305
, if the child who is the
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subject of the petition is not in the protective custody of the division, a court may order that the
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child be removed from the child's home or otherwise taken into protective custody if the court
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finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that any one or more of the following circumstances
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exist:
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(a) (i) there is an imminent danger to the physical health or safety of the child; and
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(ii) the child's physical health or safety may not be protected without removing the
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child from the custody of the child's parent or guardian;
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(b) (i) a parent or guardian engages in or threatens the child with unreasonable conduct
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that causes the child to suffer emotional damage; and
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(ii) there are no reasonable means available by which the child's emotional health may
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be protected without removing the child from the custody of the child's parent or guardian;
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(c) the child or another child residing in the same household has been physically or
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sexually abused, or is considered to be at substantial risk of being physically or sexually
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abused, by a parent or guardian, a member of the parent's or guardian's household, or other
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person known to the parent or guardian;
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(d) the parent or guardian is unwilling to have physical custody of the child;
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(e) the child is abandoned or left without any provision for the child's support;
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(f) a parent or guardian who has been incarcerated or institutionalized has not arranged
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or cannot arrange for safe and appropriate care for the child;
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(g) (i) a relative or other adult custodian with whom the child is left by the parent or
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guardian is unwilling or unable to provide care or support for the child;
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(ii) the whereabouts of the parent or guardian are unknown; and
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(iii) reasonable efforts to locate the parent or guardian are unsuccessful;
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(h) the child is in immediate need of medical care;
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(i) (i) a parent's or guardian's actions, omissions, or habitual action create an
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environment that poses a threat to the child's health or safety; or
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(ii) a parent's or guardian's action in leaving a child unattended would reasonably pose
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a threat to the child's health or safety;
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(j) the child or another child residing in the same household has been neglected;
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(k) an infant has been abandoned, as defined in Section
78-3a-313.5
;
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(l) (i) the parent or guardian, or an adult residing in the same household as the parent or
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guardian, is charged or arrested pursuant to Title 58, Chapter 37d, Clandestine Drug Lab Act;
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and
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(ii) any clandestine laboratory operation was located in the residence or on the property
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where the child resided; or
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(m) the child's welfare is otherwise endangered.
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(2) (a) For purposes of Subsection (1)(a), if a child has previously been adjudicated as
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abused, neglected, or dependent, and a subsequent incident of abuse, neglect, or dependency
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occurs involving the same substantiated abuser or under similar circumstance as the previous
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abuse, that fact constitutes prima facie evidence that the child cannot safely remain in the
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custody of the child's parent.
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(b) For purposes of Subsection (1)(c):
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(i) another child residing in the same household may not be removed from the home
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unless that child is considered to be at substantial risk of being physically or sexually abused as
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described in Subsection (1)(c) or Subsection (2)(b)(ii); and
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(ii) if a parent or guardian has received actual notice that physical or sexual abuse by a
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person known to the parent has occurred, and there is evidence that the parent or guardian
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failed to protect the child, after having received the notice, by allowing the child to be in the
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physical presence of the alleged abuser, that fact constitutes prima facie evidence that the child
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is at substantial risk of being physically or sexually abused.
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(3) In the absence of one of the factors described in Subsection (1), a court may not
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remove a child from the parent's or guardian's custody on the basis of:
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(a) educational neglect;
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(b) mental illness or poverty of the parent or guardian; or
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(c) disability of the parent or guardian, as defined in Section
57-21-2
.
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(4) A child removed from the custody of the child's parent or guardian under this
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section may not be placed or kept in a secure detention facility pending further court
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proceedings unless the child is detainable based on guidelines promulgated by the Division of
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Juvenile Justice Services.
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(5) This section does not preclude removal of a child from the child's home without a
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warrant or court order under Section
62A-4a-202.1
.
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(6) (a) Except as provided in Subsection (6)(b), a court or the Division of Child and
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Family Services may not remove a child from the custody of the child's parent or guardian on
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the sole or primary basis that the parent or guardian refuses to consent to:
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(i) the administration of a psychotropic medication to a child;
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(ii) a psychiatric, psychological, or behavioral treatment for a child; or
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(iii) a psychiatric or behavioral health evaluation of a child.
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(b) Notwithstanding Subsection (6)(a), a court or the Division of Child and Family
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Services may remove a child under conditions that would otherwise be prohibited under
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Subsection (6)(a) if failure to take an action described under Subsection (6)(a) would present a
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serious, imminent risk to the child's physical safety or the physical safety of others.
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