According to Health Care Risk Management standards supported by ASHRM, CMS Conditions of Participation, and The Joint Commission patient visitation standards, hospitals must have written visitation policies that respect patient rights. Patients generally have the right to designate visitors of their choosing, including individuals who are not immediate family members. Visitation cannot be restricted based on non-clinical factors such as relationship status or surrogate designation.
However, facilities may impose clinically reasonable or safety-based restrictions. If a visitor administers an unknown drug intravenously to a patient, this presents a clear and immediate threat to patient safety. Such conduct justifies restricting visitation to protect the patient from harm, maintain clinical control of treatment, and prevent unsafe interference with care.
Being known as a drug seeker in the community, without evidence of disruptive or harmful behavior during the visit, does not alone justify restriction under patient rights standards. Similarly, visitation cannot be denied solely because the individual is not the designated healthcare surrogate.
Legal and regulatory objectives emphasize balancing patient rights with safety and security. Therefore, a hospital may restrict visitation when a visitor’s actions pose a direct threat to patient safety.