Background:; When persons with a mental illness present a danger to themselves or others, involuntary hospital admission can be used to initiate an immediate inpatient treatment. Often, the patients have the right to appeal against compulsory admission. These processes are implemented in most mental health-care systems, but regulations and legal framework differ widely. In the Swiss canton of Basel-Stadt, a new regulation was implemented in January 2013. While the current literature holds some evidence for factors associated with involuntary admission, knowledge on who uses the right to appeal against admission is sparse.; Aims:; The study aims to examine if specific sociodemographic and clinical characteristics are associated with involunt...
Despite efforts to reduce coercion in psychiatry, involuntary hospitalizations remain frequent, repr...
Background: On the eve of reform of the 1983 Mental Health Act (MHA), little is known about how deci...
Abstract Background Over the last decades there has been an increasing pressure on the acute psychia...
Background: Involuntary admission (IA) for psychiatric treatment has a history of controversial disc...
Background Involuntary admission (IA) for psychiatric treatment has a history of controversial discu...
<strong>Introduction:</strong> Compulsive admissions of severe mentally ill patients are controversi...
Background: Compulsory admission procedures of patients with mental disorders vary between countries...
Despite efforts to reduce coercion in psychiatry, involuntary hospitalizations remain frequent, repr...
Introduction: Involuntary admissions to psychiatric hospitals, regardless of their beneficial effect...
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the European Psychiatric...
Background The use of involuntary admission in psychiatry may be necessary to enable...
Involuntary admission and treatment are common, long-standing features of psychiatry but the relatio...
Objective: Compulsory admission to a psychiatric hospital is associated with a three- to fourfold in...
BackgroundIn involuntary psychiatric admission, used globally, professionals or caretakers decide up...
Background Involuntary admission (IA) for psychiatric treatment is a massive restriction of human r...
Despite efforts to reduce coercion in psychiatry, involuntary hospitalizations remain frequent, repr...
Background: On the eve of reform of the 1983 Mental Health Act (MHA), little is known about how deci...
Abstract Background Over the last decades there has been an increasing pressure on the acute psychia...
Background: Involuntary admission (IA) for psychiatric treatment has a history of controversial disc...
Background Involuntary admission (IA) for psychiatric treatment has a history of controversial discu...
<strong>Introduction:</strong> Compulsive admissions of severe mentally ill patients are controversi...
Background: Compulsory admission procedures of patients with mental disorders vary between countries...
Despite efforts to reduce coercion in psychiatry, involuntary hospitalizations remain frequent, repr...
Introduction: Involuntary admissions to psychiatric hospitals, regardless of their beneficial effect...
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the European Psychiatric...
Background The use of involuntary admission in psychiatry may be necessary to enable...
Involuntary admission and treatment are common, long-standing features of psychiatry but the relatio...
Objective: Compulsory admission to a psychiatric hospital is associated with a three- to fourfold in...
BackgroundIn involuntary psychiatric admission, used globally, professionals or caretakers decide up...
Background Involuntary admission (IA) for psychiatric treatment is a massive restriction of human r...
Despite efforts to reduce coercion in psychiatry, involuntary hospitalizations remain frequent, repr...
Background: On the eve of reform of the 1983 Mental Health Act (MHA), little is known about how deci...
Abstract Background Over the last decades there has been an increasing pressure on the acute psychia...