Background Mental capacity is central to legal and ethical debates on the use of compulsion in psychiatry Aims To describe the clinical epidemiology of mental incapacity in patients with psychiatric disorders, including interrater reliability of assessments, frequency in the psychiatric population and associations of mental incapacity. Method Cross-sectional studies of capacity to consent to treatment for psychiatric patients were systematically reviewed from Medline, EMBASE and PsycInfo databases. Information on the reliability of assessments, frequency and associations of mental incapacity was extracted. Results Out of 37 papers reviewed, 29 different capacity assessment tools were identified. Studies were highly heterogeneous in ...
The assessment of capacity to consent to a healthcare decision is an important part of day-to-day wo...
This paper considers three possible justifications for psychiatric compulsion - dangerousness, capac...
Background: An individual's right to self-determination in treatment decisions is a central principl...
Background Mental capacity is central to legal and ethical debates on the use of compulsion in psych...
Objective: To estimate the prevalence of mental capacity to make decisions on treatment in people fr...
Despite the growing amount of data, much information is needed on patients' mental capacity to conse...
In England and Wales mental health services need to take account of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and...
Despite the growing amount of data, much information is needed on patients' mental capacity to conse...
Background: Mental capacity is now a core part of UK mental health law and clinicians will increasin...
AIMS: To evaluate treatment decision-making capacity (DMC) to consent to psychiatric treatment in i...
Aims. To evaluate treatment decision-making capacity (DMC) to consent to psychiatric treatment in in...
The Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA) was partially implemented in April 2007 and fully implemented in ...
Mental health legislation is often criticised for being fundamentally inconsistent with a rights-bas...
Objective: Studies on decisional capacity have primarily focused on cognitive disorders, whereas non...
In this paper, the second of two, we consider the capacity of those assessed with respect to their a...
The assessment of capacity to consent to a healthcare decision is an important part of day-to-day wo...
This paper considers three possible justifications for psychiatric compulsion - dangerousness, capac...
Background: An individual's right to self-determination in treatment decisions is a central principl...
Background Mental capacity is central to legal and ethical debates on the use of compulsion in psych...
Objective: To estimate the prevalence of mental capacity to make decisions on treatment in people fr...
Despite the growing amount of data, much information is needed on patients' mental capacity to conse...
In England and Wales mental health services need to take account of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and...
Despite the growing amount of data, much information is needed on patients' mental capacity to conse...
Background: Mental capacity is now a core part of UK mental health law and clinicians will increasin...
AIMS: To evaluate treatment decision-making capacity (DMC) to consent to psychiatric treatment in i...
Aims. To evaluate treatment decision-making capacity (DMC) to consent to psychiatric treatment in in...
The Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA) was partially implemented in April 2007 and fully implemented in ...
Mental health legislation is often criticised for being fundamentally inconsistent with a rights-bas...
Objective: Studies on decisional capacity have primarily focused on cognitive disorders, whereas non...
In this paper, the second of two, we consider the capacity of those assessed with respect to their a...
The assessment of capacity to consent to a healthcare decision is an important part of day-to-day wo...
This paper considers three possible justifications for psychiatric compulsion - dangerousness, capac...
Background: An individual's right to self-determination in treatment decisions is a central principl...