This article discusses the need to clarify the circumstances in which it is lawful to place a person under immediate detention or restraint in a psychiatric emergency in New Zealand. The author identifies the full range of sources of authority or justification that are recognised in New Zealand for the immediate arrest or detention of a mentally disordered person, before analysing the meaning of detention in each of these circumstances, and the statutory powers and common law justifications for detention. The article concludes that common law justifications for the detention of mentally disordered persons continue in New Zealand around the margins of the statutory schemes
Section 5(4) (nurse's holding power) of the Mental Health Act 1983 in England and Wales accounts for...
The Mental Health Act 1983 provides for compulsory admission to hospital, under criteria designed to...
Public protection and mental disorder has frequently been at the forefront of government policy sinc...
This article discusses the need to clarify the circumstances in which it is lawful to place a person...
The formal justifications for all detentions under s.2 of the Mental Health Act 1983 within an inner...
In Australia, the legal basis for the detention and restraint of people with intellectual impairment...
This article discusses the issues raised by the Coroner's findings about the deaths of Scoff Chapman...
Every day in EDs, clinicians are faced with situations where they need to decide whether to detain a...
Detention of a person suspected of an offence is one of the harshest means of judicial duress, which...
It has long been the case in jurisprudence under the European Convention on Human Rights that mental...
The use of detention for psychiatric treatment is widespread and sometimes necessary. International ...
This paper discusses legal issues associated with the seclusion of acutely disturbed patients in psy...
This article examines the compulsory psychiatric regime in Hong Kong. Under section 36 of the Mental...
New mental health legislation was enacted in New South Wales in 1983 and, although the reformed Act ...
Psychiatric advance directives (PADs) are an emerging method for adults with serious and persistent ...
Section 5(4) (nurse's holding power) of the Mental Health Act 1983 in England and Wales accounts for...
The Mental Health Act 1983 provides for compulsory admission to hospital, under criteria designed to...
Public protection and mental disorder has frequently been at the forefront of government policy sinc...
This article discusses the need to clarify the circumstances in which it is lawful to place a person...
The formal justifications for all detentions under s.2 of the Mental Health Act 1983 within an inner...
In Australia, the legal basis for the detention and restraint of people with intellectual impairment...
This article discusses the issues raised by the Coroner's findings about the deaths of Scoff Chapman...
Every day in EDs, clinicians are faced with situations where they need to decide whether to detain a...
Detention of a person suspected of an offence is one of the harshest means of judicial duress, which...
It has long been the case in jurisprudence under the European Convention on Human Rights that mental...
The use of detention for psychiatric treatment is widespread and sometimes necessary. International ...
This paper discusses legal issues associated with the seclusion of acutely disturbed patients in psy...
This article examines the compulsory psychiatric regime in Hong Kong. Under section 36 of the Mental...
New mental health legislation was enacted in New South Wales in 1983 and, although the reformed Act ...
Psychiatric advance directives (PADs) are an emerging method for adults with serious and persistent ...
Section 5(4) (nurse's holding power) of the Mental Health Act 1983 in England and Wales accounts for...
The Mental Health Act 1983 provides for compulsory admission to hospital, under criteria designed to...
Public protection and mental disorder has frequently been at the forefront of government policy sinc...