Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 109 § 109.675 — may disclose relevant health information about the minor without the
Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 109 ·
Oregon Code § 109.675·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
may disclose relevant health information about the minor without the
minors consent as provided in ORS 109.675 (2) and this subsection.
(b) If the minors
condition has deteriorated or the risk of a suicide attempt has become such
that inpatient treatment is necessary, or if the minors condition requires
detoxification in a residential or acute care facility, the minors mental
health care provider may disclose the relevant information regarding the minors
diagnosis and treatment to the minors parent or legal guardian to the extent
the mental health care provider determines the disclosure is clinically
appropriate and will serve the best interests of the minors treatment.
(c) If the mental
health care provider assesses the minor to be at serious and imminent risk of a
suicide attempt but inpatient treatment is not necessary or practicable:
(A) The mental
health care provider shall disclose relevant information about the minor to and
engage in safety planning with the minors parent, legal guardian or other
individuals the provider reasonably believes may be able to prevent or lessen
the minors risk of a suicide attempt.
(B) The mental
health care provider may disclose relevant information regarding the minors
treatment and diagnosis that the mental health care provider determines is
necessary to further the minors treatment to those organizations, including
appropriate schools and social service entities, that the mental health care
provider reasonably believes will provide treatment support to the minor to the
extent the mental health care provider determines necessary.
(d) Except as
provided in ORS 109.675 (2) and paragraphs (a) and (b) of this subsection, if a
mental health care provider has provided the minor with the opportunity to
object to the disclosure and the minor has not expressed an objection, the
mental health care provider may disclose information related to the minors
treatment and diagnosis to individuals, including the minors parent or legal
guardian, and organizations when the information directly relates to the
individuals or organizations involvement in the minors treatment.
(3)
Notwithstanding subsection (2)(c)(A) of this section, a mental health care
provider is not required to disclose the minors treatment and diagnosis
information to an individual if the mental health care provider:
(a) Reasonably
believes the individual has abused or neglected the minor or subjected the
minor to domestic violence or may abuse or neglect the minor or subject the
minor to domestic violence;
(b) Reasonably
believes disclosure of the minors information to the individual could endanger
the minor; or
(c) Determines
that it is not in the minors best interest to disclose the information to the
individual.
(4) Nothing in
this section is intended to limit a mental health care providers authority to
disclose information related to the minor with the minors consent.
(5) If a mental
health care provider discloses a minors information as provided in subsection
(2) of this section in good faith, the mental health care provider is immune
from civil liability for making the disclosure without the consent of the
minor. [1985 c.525 §2; 1989 c.721 §48; 2009 c.442 §31; 2009 c.595 §72; 2013
c.178 §2; 2014 c.45 §14; 2017 c.356 §7; 2021 c.301 §1; 2023 c.9 §7; 2024 c.73 §30]
Plain English Explanation
This Oregon statute addresses may disclose relevant health information about the minor without the
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Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 109.675
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
Frequently Asked Questions
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. Read the full statute text above for details.
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