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Mental health and incapacity legislation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

A. Buchanan*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry Yale University 34 Park Street, New Haven, CT 06519, USA. Email: alec.buchanan@yale.edu
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Abstract

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Columns
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2007 

Psychiatric patients can be treated involuntarily even if they possess the mental capacity that would render the involuntary treatment of a medical patient illegal. Dawson & Szmukler (2006) describe this as a form of discrimination and propose that the relevant legislation be ‘fused’ so that, like medical patients, most psychiatric patients could be treated involuntarily only if they lacked mental capacity. I see a number of advantages to using mental capacity as a legal criterion (Buchanan, Reference Buchanan2002, Reference Buchanan2005). I suspect, however, that Dawson & Szmukler's solution encourages its own form of discrimination. Under the proposals, ‘non-forensic’ patients could be treated involuntarily only if they lacked mental capacity. However, ‘forensic’ patients would be liable to a different, and easier-to-meet, set of criteria.

Underlying the distinction seems to be an assumption that the duties of doctors are different in respect of mentally disordered offenders. Some of the patients that forensic psychiatrists treat, Dawson & Szmukler write, are ‘not… under treatment primarily for their own benefit, but for the protection of others’ (p. 508). This seems to mistake a difference in emphasis for something more significant. First, benefiting patients and protecting others are not mutually exclusive. Second, treatment directed to both of these ends is not limited to forensic psychiatry. Third, where a tension does exist the position is straightforward. Exceptional cases notwithstanding, a doctor's primary responsibility is his patient's well-being. Ethical guidelines make no distinction in this regard between ‘forensic’ and other patients (Reference Gunn, laylor, Gunn and TaylorGunn & Taylor, 1993; Reference Bloch and GreenBloch & Green, 2006).

If capacity principles are to govern the coercion of psychiatric patients, I am not convinced that any ‘forensic exception’ is necessary. In England and Wales the important area is the hospital order under section 37 of the Mental Health Act 1983 (945 cases in 2004, 288 with restrictions). Here Dawson & Szmukler have two suggestions. The first would replace the hospital order with something like the present ‘hospital direction’ under section 45A of the Act. The second would sanction the involuntary treatment of a patient with mental capacity for a period ‘proportionate to the seriousness of the offence’ if a court thought that this would reduce reoffending. Presumably, the same treatment would be clinically indicated in many cases but the suggested criteria do not require this. Psychiatrists have complained that the hospital direction requires them to declare patients ‘fit for punishment’ (Reference Mullen, Briggs and DaltonMullen et al, 2000). The second suggestion implies the use of compulsory psychiatric treatment to achieve a legal end.

Instead, if capacity is to govern involuntary psychiatric treatment, why not make the passing of a hospital order, with or without restrictions, dependent on the patient consenting (or, if the patient lacks capacity, dependent on treatment being in their best interests)? The law could then permit re-sentencing if the convicted defendant changed their mind (or regained capacity and refused treatment), when the situation would be similar to the breaching of a probation order with a condition of treatment. The initial decision to give consent would often be difficult especially where the offence was serious and the choice lay between a substantial prison term and indeterminate detention in hospital. However, I am not clear that a competent defendant should be prevented from making it, particularly if the interim hospital order under section 38 of the Act remained available for cases where the psychiatrist was unsure whether to offer treatment or the patient was unsure whether to accept.

Because adherence is often partial there would still be cases where the doctor's subsequent decision that a failure to participate in treatment amounted to withdrawal of consent could be seen as declaring the patient ‘fit for punishment’. Such a scheme would also have to overcome objections that section 37 of the Act already provides an efficient way of getting treatment to people who need it, resources permitting. However, by making court-ordered treatment dependent on consent, it would bring the management of those with psychiatric illness more into line with that of patients elsewhere in medicine. Moreover, it would do so without replacing one form of discrimination with another.

References

Bloch, S. & Green, S. A. (2006) An ethical framework for psychiatry. British Journal of Psychiatry, 188, 712.Google Scholar
Buchanan, A. (2002) Psychiatric detention and treatment: a suggested criterion. Journal of Mental Health Law, 6, 3541.Google Scholar
Buchanan, A. (2005) Descriptive diagnosis, personality disorder and detention. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology 16, 538551.Google Scholar
Gunn, J. & laylor, P. (1993) Ethics in forensic psychiatry. In Forensic Psychiatry, Clinical, Legal and Ethical Issues (eds Gunn, J. & Taylor, P.), pp. 857884. Butterworth Heinemann.Google Scholar
Mullen, P., Briggs, S., Dalton, T., et al (2000) Forensic mental health services in Australia. international Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 23, 433452.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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