Let us start our discussion by indicating a frame of reference for the comments we wish to give about civil rights. Our discussion will relate primarily to patients, who have been hospitalized for the observation and treatment of mental illness. It is also based on the statutes in Ohio and on the practice in the courts and more especially in the receiving hospitals and state hospitals in Ohio. The receiving hospitals admit a high percentage of voluntary patients, whereas the state hospitals admit patients who have been committed
Nebraska\u27s procedures for the civil commitment of the mentally ill are lacking in protections for...
When a dangerously mentally ill person is in need of in-patient psychiatric hospitalization, the app...
The rights revolution, sparked by the United States Supreme Court under the leadership of former C...
Let us start our discussion by indicating a frame of reference for the comments we wish to give abou...
Mental illness is principally a medical problem, but there are basic legal considerations to be obse...
Commitment to a mental institution by itself does not, in all states, suspend civil rights. The cour...
One aspect of the court order that tends to produce fear in the hearts and minds of administrators e...
O\u27Connor v. Donaldson, 422 U.S. 563 (1975). A constitutionally based right to treatment for the c...
In May, 1960, an editorial in the American Bar Association Journal condemned the understaffing and o...
The purpose of this comment is to highlight the new procedural and substantive rights that are now g...
The moral right of mental patients to adequate care and treatment has long been recognized in our so...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
Here are two basic ways in which a person may assume the social role of mental patient. First, it ...
The author discusses the court decisions re-volving around the right to treatment that have culminat...
The Supreme Court has recognized that civil commitment constitutes a significant deprivation of libe...
Nebraska\u27s procedures for the civil commitment of the mentally ill are lacking in protections for...
When a dangerously mentally ill person is in need of in-patient psychiatric hospitalization, the app...
The rights revolution, sparked by the United States Supreme Court under the leadership of former C...
Let us start our discussion by indicating a frame of reference for the comments we wish to give abou...
Mental illness is principally a medical problem, but there are basic legal considerations to be obse...
Commitment to a mental institution by itself does not, in all states, suspend civil rights. The cour...
One aspect of the court order that tends to produce fear in the hearts and minds of administrators e...
O\u27Connor v. Donaldson, 422 U.S. 563 (1975). A constitutionally based right to treatment for the c...
In May, 1960, an editorial in the American Bar Association Journal condemned the understaffing and o...
The purpose of this comment is to highlight the new procedural and substantive rights that are now g...
The moral right of mental patients to adequate care and treatment has long been recognized in our so...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
Here are two basic ways in which a person may assume the social role of mental patient. First, it ...
The author discusses the court decisions re-volving around the right to treatment that have culminat...
The Supreme Court has recognized that civil commitment constitutes a significant deprivation of libe...
Nebraska\u27s procedures for the civil commitment of the mentally ill are lacking in protections for...
When a dangerously mentally ill person is in need of in-patient psychiatric hospitalization, the app...
The rights revolution, sparked by the United States Supreme Court under the leadership of former C...