scholarly journals Mental Health Act: Alleged unlawful detention

1987 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 226-227
Author(s):  
Carmel O'Donovan

On several occasions in 1979 a GP member was consulted by the father and brother of a young man because they were concerned about his violent and aggressive behaviour. The GP arranged for a consultant psychiatrist to visit the patient at home on three occasions, although once he was not in and on the other two refused to see the psychiatrist and threatened him with violence.

1998 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emad Salib ◽  
Boni Iparragirre

All applications of s.5(2) of the Mental Health Act 1983, allowing the emergency detention of voluntary in-patients in North Cheshire between 1985 and 1995, were reviewed to examine general trends in its use and to assess variables likely to influence its outcome. Of the 877 applications implemented (4% of all admissions), 500 (57%) were converted to longer-term detention under the Act, 396 (45%) were converted to s.2 and 104 (12%) to s.3. The other 377 (43%) detained patients under s.5(2) regained informal status. The review found that time of application of section, length of hospital stay prior to application, medical officer's grade, use of s.5(4) and clinical diagnosis are best predictors of s.5(2) outcome. The results are similar to other published studies and seem to reflect a national pattern, possibly implying that patients detained under this short-term detention order have an almost equal chance of either regaining their voluntary status or being detained under another section by the end of the 72 hours. This may raise questions about the purpose of s.5(2) as expressed by the Mental Health Act Commission.


2015 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-18
Author(s):  
B. Masood ◽  
S. O’Ceallaigh ◽  
T. Thekiso ◽  
M. Nichol ◽  
P. Kowalska-Beda ◽  
...  

BackgroundFew studies have described clinical characteristics of patients subject to an involuntary detention in an Irish context. The Irish Mental Health Act 2001 makes provision under Section 23(1), whereby a person who has voluntary admission status can be detained.AimsThis study aimed to describe all involuntary admissions to St Patrick’s University Hospital (SPUH) (2011–2013) and to evaluate clinical characteristics of voluntary patients who underwent Mental Health Act assessment during 2011 to determine differences in those who had involuntary admission orders completed and those who did not.MethodsAll uses of Mental Health Act 2001 within SPUH 2011–2013 were identified. All uses of Section 23(1) during 2011 were reviewed and relevant documents/case-notes examined using a pro forma covering clinical data, factors recognized to influence involuntary admissions and validated scales were used to determine diagnoses, insight, suicide and violence risk.ResultsOver 2011–2013, 2.5–3.8% of all admissions were involuntary with more detained after use of Section 23(1) than Section 14(2). The majority of initiations of Section 23(1) did not result in an involuntary admission (72%), occurred out of hours (52%) and many occurred early after admission (<1 week, 43%). Initiation of Section 23(1) by a consultant psychiatrist (p=0.001), suicide risk (p=0.03) and lack of patient insight into treatment (p=0.007) predicted conversion to involuntary admission.ConclusionThis study predicts a role for patient insight, suicide risk and consultant psychiatrist decision making in the initiation of Mental Health Act assessment of voluntary patients. Further data describing the involuntary admissions process in an Irish setting are needed.


1975 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald Blair

The difficulty in diagnosing various types of personality is considerable. What are the dividing lines between the so-called ‘ordinary personality’, ‘trend disturbances of personality’, ‘trait disorders of personality’ and ‘psychopathic disorders of personality’. There are no border lines and the qualities of one may shade into those of another. From the medicolegal point of view, however, it is obviously essential to determine which disorders of personality, if any, make sufferers not legally fully responsible for their actions. It is evident that only psychopathic disorders qualify for legal disposals that recognize their lack of legal responsibility to one degree or another. On the other hand, the latitude of interpretation of this diagnosis since it was recognized legally in the Mental Health Act 1959, has led to its use in the courts being in many cases of nebulous and doubtful value. If the conception of this entity is not to be abolished altogether there will in my estimation have to be a more exclusive and narrow meaning signified by psychopathic disorder and this article presents provocative suggestions how this may be achieved as well as a precise description of all aspects of psychopathy. The snags and illusions which have so far resulted in the mêlée of opinion regarding the whole of this matter and the influence this has had on the custodial and therapeutic disposal of this group of antisocial offenders and criminals will be discussed in a further article to be published in a subsequent issue of this journal.


Author(s):  
Tim Raine ◽  
George Collins ◽  
Catriona Hall ◽  
Nina Hjelde ◽  
James Dawson ◽  
...  

This chapter explores psychiatry, including aggressive behaviour emergency, the Mental Health Act, alcoholism, aggression and violence, acute confusion, dementia, mood disturbance/psychosis, and anxiety disorders/neuroses.


Author(s):  
A. Zigmond ◽  
A. J. Holland

<p>The powers enshrined in mental health legislation go directly to fundamental principles central to any caring and democratic society. The tension and dilemma that exists is, on the one hand, the importance of respect for an individual’s right to make decision’s affecting his/her own life to, on the other, the recognition that there are people with mental disabilities that may be vulnerable to abuse and/or neglect and who throughout their lives or at particular times need care and/or treatment, which they may not seek or be able to consent to themselves. In any society it is through case law and statute that an attempt is made to resolve this tension and to ensure that individual rights are not infringed and that those who need care and treatment receive what is in their best interest. Thus a change in such legislation requires the most rigorous of examination and must be judged on the grounds that it a) does not infringe accepted principles such as those of the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights and the European Convention, b) is based on sound ethical principles and does not conflict with the established law of the country, and c) it is practicable and achieves the right balance with respect to the potential tension described above. As practising clinicians (one working in an acute psychiatric service the other in a district learning disability service) we are not in a position expertly to judge the first of these but we believe we can contribute to the second and the third. In this paper we consider specifically the reasons for, and the consequences that follow, the failure on the Government’s part to accept the central importance of decision-making capacity assessment in any new mental health legislation.</p><p>The Green Paper proposals for a new Mental Health Act for England and Wales have now been published. A broad definition of ‘mental disorder’ has been retained, a new system of tribunals is to be established and compulsory treatment in the community would become lawful. However, it rejects the recommendation of the expert committee chaired by Professor Richardson that the assessment of an individual’s decision-making capacity should be a determining factor in the use of compulsory detention. Given this, it does not address the relationship between this legislation and the proposed Mental Incapacity Act. The failure to recognise the central place of decision-making capacity in a modern Mental Health Act is, we believe, a serious omission as it is a reflection of a failure to acknowledge that the basic principle of autonomy is central to such legislation.</p>


1990 ◽  
Vol 156 (5) ◽  
pp. 732-735 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stuart McLaren ◽  
Frederick W. A. Browne ◽  
Pamela J. Taylor

Within the setting of a regional secure unit, all doses of medication given p.r.n. over three months were ascertained and the details of each administration determined from prescription charts and a semistructured interview with the nursing staff involved. Thirty-two patients were resident for all or part of the study, all compulsorily detained. Only 15 were given medication p.r.n.) compared with the other patients they were significantly younger and more likely to be detained under civil orders than under the criminal provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983. Rarely was the medication the sole intervention in a crisis. In terms of effects on the overall treatment programme of the patient, medication given p.r.n. seemed to have an impact in only one small subgroup.


Author(s):  
Mat Kinton

<p>I intend here to look at two related areas: first, the actual powers that supervised community treatment provides to clinicians, especially in relation to the administration of treatment, and, second, the relationship of SCT with the other community powers of the Mental Health Act, especially the power under s.17 to allow detained patients leave from hospital. Whether such a focus will enable us to be “sure of the thing” that is SCT is perhaps doubtful, and we obviously cannot resolve the question of how (or indeed if) the SCT regime will be operated in practice across England and Wales, but it may help us to think more clearly about the possibilities and prepare ourselves to untangle some of the knots established in the primary legislation. I will conclude with some comments on the potential numbers of patients involved and whether Scotland’s experience of community treatment orders tells us anything about the likely implementation of powers in England and Wales.</p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-70
Author(s):  
David Hewitt

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explain a decision of the Court of Appeal about the duty an Approved Mental Health Professional (AMHP) will sometimes have to consult a patient's nearest relative, and to set that decision in the context of an earlier one. Design/methodology/approach – Each decision is examined in detail and one is compared with the other. Reference is made to the Mental Health Act 1983 Code of Practice. Findings – It will be harder for an AMHP to establish that consultation is not reasonably practicable, and it will be correspondingly easier, in some cases, for a nearest relative to obtain information about a patient or achieve proximity to her. Originality/value – This is thought to be the first time the two cases have been considered together or in their true context.


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