There is no perfect answer here, and it will change drastically based on programming style.
One thing I'd advise against is your second option, in a literal sense;
options = [ true, true, true, true, false, true, true, false, false, false, false, /*...*/];
It's impossible to have any understanding of what each of those does, while keeping in the context of the code.
Boolean properties on a single object are fine, but become unwieldy when you're talking about dozens, let alone tens of thousands of properties, on a single object, at the same nesting level.
In more modern browsers (or older browsers with ES5 polyfills), I feel this is a prime candidate for Set;
var options = new Set();
form.onchange = function (e) {
var el = e.target;
if (isCheckbox(el)) {
if (el.checked) {
options.add( el.value );
} else {
options.delete( el.value );
}
}
};
The reason I might write it this way is so that the code for adding the keys doesn't really need to know anything about the keys.
In larger applications, having a generic approach, where data is fed into a framework (React/Angular/Ember/etc/hand-made) which automatically builds your form, listens for events, and pulls values from the dynamically-built page in a fashion like this, makes it a little harder to reason about, but also makes it much easier to add, remove or modify options, down the road, as only the code that displays the option, and the code which use the value need to care.
const formOptions = [
{ label: "Medical", value: "medical" },
{ label: "Legal", value: "legal" }
];
const form = buildForm(formOptions);
/* ...previous code... */
form.onsubmit = function () {
Array.from(options). /* map, filter, forEach, reduce, etc */( ... );
};
The rest of the code, in between, is just wiring.
Again, not perfect; not the only answer, but one take, and why.