Policy & Program
Minors
and the Right to Consent to Health Care
Reproduced with permission from The
Alan Guttmacher Institute from: Boonstra H and Nash E, Minors and
the Right to Consent to Health Care, The Guttmacher Report on Public Policy,
2000, 3(4): 4-8.
The notion that many minors have the capacity and, indeed, the right to
make important decisions about health care has been well established in
federal and state policy. Many states specifically authorize minors to
consent to contraceptive services, testing and treatment for HIV and other
sexually transmitted diseases, prenatal care and delivery services, treatment
for alcohol and drug abuse, and outpatient mental health care. With the
exception of abortion, lawmakers have generally resisted attempts to impose
a parental consent or notification requirement on minors' access to reproductive
health care and other sensitive services. Nevertheless, the movement to
"restore" parental rights and to legislate parental control over minors'
reproductive health care decisions remains active.
By Heather Boonstra and Elizabeth Nash
Establishing rules for minors' consent for medical care has been one
of the more difficult issues to face policymakers. On the one hand, it
seems eminently reasonable that parents should have the right and responsibility
to make health care decisions for their minor child. On the other hand,
it may be more important for a young person to have access to confidential
medical services than it is to require that parents be informed of their
child's condition. Minors who are sexually active, pregnant, or infected
with a sexually transmitted disease (STD) and those who abuse drugs or
alcohol or suffer from emotional or psychological problems may avoid seeking
care if they must involve their parents. Recognizing this reality, many
states explicitly authorize a minor to make decisions about their own
medical care, but balancing the rights of parents and the rights of minors
remains a topic of debate.
At the federal level, the focal point of debate over minors' access
to confidential services has been the Title X family planning program.
Since its inception in 1970, services supported by Title X have been available
to anyone who needs them without regard to age. As a result, Title X-supported
clinics provide contraceptive services and other reproductive health care
to minors on a confidential basis, although they encourage minors to involve
their parents in their decision to seek services. Over the years, the
provision of confidential contraceptive services to minors has come under
attack from conservatives in Congress, who have repeatedly mounted efforts
to require that a parent give consent or be notified before a minor receives
these services in a Title X clinic. In 1998, the House of Representatives
passed a parental notification requirement, but the Senate did not, and
the provision was never enacted.
Similar debates have occurred at the state level. In Texas, for example,
the legislature in 1997 voted to prohibit the use of state family planning
funds to provide prescription drugs, such as birth control pills and medication
for treating STDs, to minors without parental consent. The law was allowed
to go into effect in 1998, after the Texas Supreme Court concluded that
striking down the provision without evidence of harm would be premature.
In fact, the law does not interfere with minors' ability to obtain confidential
services from Title Xsupported clinics and other providers who serve
minors with federal funds.
In 2000, the South Carolina legislature considered a bill to prohibit
the use of state funds to distribute condoms and other types of contraceptives
to minors younger than age 16 whose parents had registered an objection
with the state health department to their child's receiving such services.
The measure was passed by the House of Representatives but dropped during
committee consideration in the Senate. Similar measures in other states
did not receive serious consideration, even at the committee level, and
none were enacted.
The States and Medical Care for Minors
States have traditionally recognized the right of parents to make health
care decisions on their children's behalf, on the presumption that before
reaching the age of majority (18 in all but four states), young people
lack the experience and judgment to make fully informed decisions. There
have long been exceptions to this rule, however, such as medical emergencies
when there is no time to obtain parental consent and in cases where a
minor is "emancipated" by marriage or other circumstances and thus legally
able to make decisions on his or her own behalf.
In addition, courts in some states have adopted the so-called mature
minor rule, which allows a minor who is sufficiently intelligent and mature
to understand the nature and consequences of a proposed treatment to consent
to medical treatment without consulting his or her parents or obtaining
their permission.
Moreover, over the last 30 years, states have passed laws explicitly
authorizing minors to consent to health care related to sexual activity,
substance abuse and mental health care. Although some states give doctors
the option of informing parents that their minor son or daughter has received
or is seeking these services, these laws leave the decision of whether
to inform the parents entirely to the discretion of the physician as to
the best interests of the minor.
This expansion of minors' authority over health care decisions was spurred
in part by U.S. Supreme Court rulings extending the constitutional right
to privacy to a minor's decision to obtain contraceptives or to terminate
an unwanted pregnancy. It also reflects a recognition on the part of lawmakers
that while parental involvement is desirable, many minors will not seek
services they need if they have to tell their parents.
The Alan Guttmacher Institute has periodically reviewed state laws pertaining
to minors' authority to consent to medical care and to make other important
decisions without their parents' knowledge or permission. This year its
review was expanded to also take into account state court decisions and
attorneys general opinions that affect young people's access to confidential
services (see table). The review, conducted
in July 2000, found the following:
- Twenty-five states and the District of Columbia have laws or policies
that explicitly give minors the authority to consent to contraceptive
services.
- Twenty-seven states and the District of Columbia have laws or policies
that specifically authorize a pregnant minor to obtain prenatal care
and delivery services without parental consent or notification.
- All 50 states and the District of Columbia specifically allow minors
to consent to testing and treatment for STDs, including HIV. (With respect
to HIV, three states limit this authorization to testing only.)
- Forty-four states and the District of Columbia have laws or policies
that authorize a minor who abuses drugs or alcohol to consent to confidential
counseling and medical care.
- Laws in 20 states and the District of Columbia give minors the explicit
authority to consent to outpatient mental health services.
No state explicitly requires parental consent or notification for any
of these services. However, two states--Texas and Utah--prohibit the use
of state funds to provide contraceptive services to minors without parental
consent. And one state--Iowa--requires that parents be notified if their
child receives a positive HIV test.
In addition to laws and policies that permit minors to consent to specific
services, 21 states have statutes that authorize minors to consent to
general medical and surgical care, at least under some circumstances,
such as having a child, being pregnant or having reached a certain age.
In Alabama, for example, minors aged 14 and older may consent to general
medical care; in South Carolina, they may do so at 16.
The States and Abortion
The one notable exception to the expansion of minors' decision-making
authority on health care matters is abortion. Only two states--Connecticut
and Maine--and the District of Columbia have laws that affirm a minor's
ability to obtain an abortion on her own. By contrast, 31 states have
laws in effect that require the involvement of at least one parent in
their daughter's abortion decision: In 16 of these states, a minor must
have the consent of one or both parents; in the other 15 states, one or
both parents must be notified prior to the abortion.
All but one of these statutes provides a confidential alternative to
parental involvement, in the form of either a judicial bypass, in which
a minor may obtain authorization for an abortion from a judge without
informing her parents, or, in the case of Maryland, a "physician bypass"
that permits a doctor to waive parental notice if the minor is capable
of giving informed consent or if notice would lead to abuse of the minor.
The Supreme Court has said that a confidential alternative is required
to protect a minor's constitutional right to privacy. Utah is the only
state whose statute does not meet this requirement.
Efforts to enact new parental involvement laws in the context of abortion
have slowed in recent years. Between 1991 and 1997, the number of states
with laws in effect mandating parental consent or notification rose from
18 to 30, but between 1997 and 2000, that number increased by only one.
In large part, this drop-off reflects the fact that 10 other states have
enacted laws that are currently blocked by courts from going into effect,
leaving only seven states that have no parental involvement requirement
on the books.
Some proponents of mandatory parental involvement justify the differential
treatment of abortion and other reproductive health services on the ground
that the decision to terminate a pregnancy is less a medical choice than
a major life decision. Because terminating an unplanned pregnancy can
have a significant long-term impact on a woman's psychological and emotional
well-being, they say, parental guidance is especially important. However,
states allow minors to make other decisions that can have a lasting effect
on their lives. Most states, for example, permit teenagers to drop out
high school without their parents' approval, despite the documented adverse
effects associated with the lack of a diploma. Although all states require
young people to stay in school at least to age 16 or 17, except in very
limited circumstances, once that age threshold has been reached, the states
generally impose no barriers to minors' deciding to leave. A few states
permit a minor to marry without parental consent under certain circumstances,
usually pregnancy.
Notably, more than half of the states that require parental involvement
for abortion permit a pregnant minor to make the decision to continue
her pregnancy and to consent to prenatal care and delivery without consulting
a parent. In addition, states appear to consider a minor who is a parent
to be fully competent to make major decisions affecting the health and
future of his or her child, even though many of these same states require
a minor to involve her parents if she decides to terminate her pregnancy.
- Twenty-nine states and the District of Columbia currently have laws
that authorize a minor parent to consent to medical care for his or
her child.
- Most striking, 34 states and the District of Columbia explicitly
permit a minor mother to place her child for adoption without her own
parents' permission or knowledge. In addition, 11 states make no distinction
between minor and adult parents; in these states, it appears, the decision
to relinquish her child for adoption rests with the young mother.
In practice, it is likely that some adoption agencies and judges (all
adoptions, regardless of the mother's age, have to be approved by a court)
require that a young woman's parents be involved in the adoption decision.
In principle, however, virtually all states consider a minor mother capable
of making an independent decision about whether or not to place her child
for adoption (although a few states require that the minor have a court-appointed
guardian).
Ensuring Minors' Access to Health Care
Most youth-serving agencies and medical professionals believe that access
to confidential services is essential, because many sexually active adolescents
will not seek care if they have to inform a parent or have their parent's
consent. "Minors' consent laws are extremely important," argues Abigail
English, director of the Center for Adolescent Health and the Law. "They
encourage young people to seek the health care services they need and
enable them to talk candidly with their providers."
Advocates of parental involvement laws, which include organizations
such as Focus on the Family and the Family Research Council, maintain
that minors' consent laws reflect "an increasing nonchalance about the
sanctity of the family unit on the part of the government." Government
policies, they contend, undermine parental authority and family autonomy.
Conservative activists also argue that granting minors access to confidential
services is tantamount to condoning sexual activity. Despite access to
contraceptives, they say, pregnancy rates among teens remain high. "The
current prescription for preventing pregnancy and STDs among adolescents
has failed miserably in solving the problem," according to Focus on the
Family. "Parental involvement and the transmitting of the parent's values
are the most effective deterrent in preventing early sexual activity."
Providers who serve young people agree that parental involvement is
desirable but point out that in some instances, it is not to a minor's
benefit. "In the best of all worlds, teens and parents would work in partnership
on decisions that could have a lifelong impact," says Leslie Tarr Laurie,
president and chief executive officer of Tapestry Health Systems, a health
services provider in western Massachusetts. "But we see teens all the
time whose parents are not their best advocates. In our state, where the
greatest growth in HIV cases is among adolescents, access to reproductive
health care is a matter of life and death. Confidentiality is the cornerstone
of our services," Laurie reports. "We help teenagers avoid not only the
costly and often tragic consequences of unintended pregnancy and childbearing,
but also an early death from AIDS. The bottom line is, if we don't assure
access to confidential health care, teenagers simply will stop seeking
the care they desire and need."
The research on which this article is based was supported in part by
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under grant FPR000072-01.
The conclusions and opinions expressed in this article, however, are those
of the authors and The Alan
Guttmacher Institute.
Next:
Minors' Right to Consent to Health Care Table