Szmukler, Daw and Dawson have produced a detailed and carefully worded proposal for a new approach fusing mental health and capacity legislation. In practice their proposal abolishes separate mental health legislation. It aims to ensure that compulsory care for the mentally ill is provided, when needed, according to the same principles as in severe disabling physical disorders (e.g. toxic confusion states, acute head injury, dementia). Their proposal derives from two strongly held and clearly presented principles – respect for the autonomy of the psychiatric patient and removal of what they consider the stigmatising discrimination between mental and physical illness. Capacity becomes the threshold for considering any compulsory detention or...
The possibility of a single statue to replace our current dual approach must now be the most fundame...
© 2019 Kay Elizabeth WilsonAs mental health law involves state-sanctioned coercion, and mental healt...
Nobody who works in or writes about this area of the law can fail to acknowledge that we are experie...
Except for the criminal justice system, the Mental Health Act 1983 (as amended by the MHA 2007) is t...
Calls for a new Mental Health Act for England and Wales, and the government’s response to those call...
It would be a mistake to think of mental health law as a generic form of law directed at a particula...
The powers enshrined in mental health legislation go directly to fundamental principles central to a...
The impact of compulsory measures of medical treatment for mental disorders have for some time inter...
An outline for a model law is presented here that would govern the non-consensual treatment of peopl...
I agree that someone’s lack of mental capacity, or their inability to make proper choices, as I woul...
AbstractIntroductionIn the regulation of involuntary treatment, a balance must be found between duti...
In this second Five-Minute Focus on Law on mental health, we consider how the law deals with the tre...
This case concerns the scope of the compulsory treatment provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983. I...
This paper considers three possible justifications for psychiatric compulsion - dangerousness, capac...
This paper considers three possible justifications for psychiatric compulsion - dangerousness, capac...
The possibility of a single statue to replace our current dual approach must now be the most fundame...
© 2019 Kay Elizabeth WilsonAs mental health law involves state-sanctioned coercion, and mental healt...
Nobody who works in or writes about this area of the law can fail to acknowledge that we are experie...
Except for the criminal justice system, the Mental Health Act 1983 (as amended by the MHA 2007) is t...
Calls for a new Mental Health Act for England and Wales, and the government’s response to those call...
It would be a mistake to think of mental health law as a generic form of law directed at a particula...
The powers enshrined in mental health legislation go directly to fundamental principles central to a...
The impact of compulsory measures of medical treatment for mental disorders have for some time inter...
An outline for a model law is presented here that would govern the non-consensual treatment of peopl...
I agree that someone’s lack of mental capacity, or their inability to make proper choices, as I woul...
AbstractIntroductionIn the regulation of involuntary treatment, a balance must be found between duti...
In this second Five-Minute Focus on Law on mental health, we consider how the law deals with the tre...
This case concerns the scope of the compulsory treatment provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983. I...
This paper considers three possible justifications for psychiatric compulsion - dangerousness, capac...
This paper considers three possible justifications for psychiatric compulsion - dangerousness, capac...
The possibility of a single statue to replace our current dual approach must now be the most fundame...
© 2019 Kay Elizabeth WilsonAs mental health law involves state-sanctioned coercion, and mental healt...
Nobody who works in or writes about this area of the law can fail to acknowledge that we are experie...