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ORLANDO, Fla. – The House Children, Families and Seniors subcommittee on Thursday unanimously passed a guardianship bill that was recently introduced to the Florida legislature. The bill will now be presented to the Justice subcommittee for consideration.
Stakeholders
in Florida’s guardianship program are trying to push legislation to
increase oversight on state guardians, especially when it comes to how
they handle their clients’ medical directives and money.
HB
709 was created after former Orlando based guardian Rebecca Fierle made
headlines for placing do not resuscitate orders on patients who did not
want to die. She’s also accused of double-billing both her patients and
a local hospital to the tune of almost 4 million dollars without the
courts even knowing.
“It helps those who cannot help themselves,” state Rep. Colleen Burton said, who helped draft and filed the bill.
Burton
told the committee how the bill would prevent guardians from having
absolute power over a patient’s medical and financial affairs and would
prevent them from being able to receive any sort of kickbacks.
“We want to make sure we know everything that's coming in,” Burton said.
Burton
told the committee the guardianship bill would provide at least one
more layer of oversight in cases involving patients with DNR orders. HB
709 would also require more research be done to see if there are any
alternatives to putting a guardianship in place.
Full Article & Source:
Guardian bill passes first hurdle in Florida
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