- The department has the following powers and duties with respect to the provision of a statewide electronic system, referred to in this section as the “system”, that allows qualified individuals to upload and access advance medical directives:
- To ensure that qualified individuals may access the system for treatment purposes that are allowed under the federal “Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996”, Pub.L. 104-191, as amended;
- To contract with one or more health information organization networks for the creation, administration, and maintenance of the system; and
- To promulgate rules in accordance with article 4 of title 24 to oversee the provisions of this article 54, including but not limited to rules establishing:
- Criteria for qualified individuals to have access to the system and advance medical directives;
- Procedures by which a qualified individual may add or remove an advance medical directive to or from the system;
- Procedures by which a qualified individual may access and download an advance medical directive from the system; and
- Procedures and safeguards for ensuring the confidentiality and secure storage of the information contained in an advance medical directive that is added to and maintained in the system.
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- Upon the request of an individual, or authorized surrogate decision-maker, a qualified provider that has an agreement with the health information organization network as required under the federal “Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996”, Pub.L. 104-191, as amended, may upload the individual’s advance health-care directive to the system. The advance health-care directive shall only be uploaded to the system by a qualified provider after the individual or authorized surrogate decision-maker has consulted with the qualified provider in person or through telehealth, as defined in section 10-16-123 (4)(e). A qualified provider that uploads an advance health-care directive to the system is not subject to civil or criminal liability or regulatory sanction for action taken in accordance with this subsection (2).
- Prior to the upload of an advance health-care directive to the system, the individual, or authorized surrogate decision-maker, shall sign an electronic affidavit in the presence of a qualified provider affirming the advance health-care directive is appropriately executed, current, and accurate. Signing the electronic affidavit revokes any prior advance health-care directives of the same type previously uploaded to the system.
- The individual, or authorized surrogate decision-maker, is responsible for ensuring that the advance health-care directive uploaded to the system is appropriately executed, current, and accurate.
- Emergency medical service personnel, an individual health-care provider, a health-care facility, or any other person or entity that complies with an advance health- care directive accessed from the system is not subject to civil or criminal liability or regulatory sanction for action taken in accordance with the advance health-care directive, unless the person or entity has actual knowledge of an advance health-care directive properly executed after the date of the advance health-care directive that is uploaded to the system.
Source: L. 2019: Entire article added, (SB 19-073), ch. 186, p. 2079, § 1, effective August 2. L. 2020: (2)(a) amended, (SB 20-212), ch. 235, p. 1140, § 4, effective July 6.
Cross references: For the legislative declaration in SB 20-212, see section 1 of chapter 235, Session Laws of Colorado 2020.