Part I describes the development of the legal framework for legally-proscribed criteria for nonvoluntary hospitalization. Part II is a description of how the purportedly regulated system actually works, applied at various points in the process. While the discussion is structured as a description of the steps from the community to full-time hospitalization, the descriptions and the illustrative examples should present a fairly complete picture of the variety of situations with which a metropolitan public acute psychiatric hospitalization service is called upon to deal. Part III is a discussion of one central legal issue, the role of the judiciary in the hospitalization process, in light of the conclusions reached in Parts I and II
This paper discusses the use of court-imposed standards for public mental hospitals as a method of i...
Half a decade ago, the Zinermon court announced the need for clinicians to evaluate the competence o...
Traditionally, the power of the state has included the power to commit mentally ill citizens to psyc...
This paper was prepared for presentation at the Conference on Mental Health and the Law, the School ...
Involuntary civil commitment is the business of hospitalizing and treating, without their consent, p...
It is hard for lawyers and doctors to see eye to eye on the fundamental problem of how to eliminate ...
Throughout the United States, mentally ill persons are confined against their will in psychiatric ho...
A number of recent events makes it timely to reconsider certain aspects of the relation between psyc...
This paper was intended as a contribution to the study of psychiatry, and especially institutional p...
The issues surrounding the legal responsibility of caring for and maintaining a person with a mental...
In 1949, the last year for which accurate statistics are available, 390,567 persons were admitted to...
The author discusses the court decisions re-volving around the right to treatment that have culminat...
In 1930, Ford sold Fords only in black and states offered treatment for mental illness only in publi...
Involuntary psychiatric hospitalization in the Commonwealth of Kentucky has become a salient issue b...
Mental illness is principally a medical problem, but there are basic legal considerations to be obse...
This paper discusses the use of court-imposed standards for public mental hospitals as a method of i...
Half a decade ago, the Zinermon court announced the need for clinicians to evaluate the competence o...
Traditionally, the power of the state has included the power to commit mentally ill citizens to psyc...
This paper was prepared for presentation at the Conference on Mental Health and the Law, the School ...
Involuntary civil commitment is the business of hospitalizing and treating, without their consent, p...
It is hard for lawyers and doctors to see eye to eye on the fundamental problem of how to eliminate ...
Throughout the United States, mentally ill persons are confined against their will in psychiatric ho...
A number of recent events makes it timely to reconsider certain aspects of the relation between psyc...
This paper was intended as a contribution to the study of psychiatry, and especially institutional p...
The issues surrounding the legal responsibility of caring for and maintaining a person with a mental...
In 1949, the last year for which accurate statistics are available, 390,567 persons were admitted to...
The author discusses the court decisions re-volving around the right to treatment that have culminat...
In 1930, Ford sold Fords only in black and states offered treatment for mental illness only in publi...
Involuntary psychiatric hospitalization in the Commonwealth of Kentucky has become a salient issue b...
Mental illness is principally a medical problem, but there are basic legal considerations to be obse...
This paper discusses the use of court-imposed standards for public mental hospitals as a method of i...
Half a decade ago, the Zinermon court announced the need for clinicians to evaluate the competence o...
Traditionally, the power of the state has included the power to commit mentally ill citizens to psyc...