Mass shootings, such as the killing of school children and staff in Newtown, Connecticut, have provided brutal reminders of inadequacies in our nation’s mental health system. In the wake of these shootings, President Obama asserted that “[w]e are going to need to work on making access to mental health care as easy as access to a gun.” But what should society do when the person needing mental health treatment refuses care—when the problem is not rooted in access but in free will? When is involuntary treatment justified? In deciding whether to forcibly medicate, multiple interests come into play, including patient autonomy, public safety, and the patient’s medical welfare. As a society, we have overemphasized patient autonomy and underemphasi...
Prof. Cohen and I answer six questions: (1) Why do we lock people up? (2) How can involuntary civil ...
This article begins with an in-depth discussion of the UCLA incident followed by the history of prot...
Background: Involuntary treatment is a key issue in healthcare ethics. In this study, ethical issues...
Mass shootings, such as the killing of school children and staff in Newtown, Connecticut, have provi...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...
The issues surrounding the legal responsibility of caring for and maintaining a person with a mental...
Acute episodes of mental illness temporarily destroy the capacity required to give informed consent ...
Global mental health, as a field, has focused on both increasing access to mental health services an...
Medical advances have led to statutory changes and common law overrulings. This paper argues that su...
This paper was prepared for presentation at the Conference on Mental Health and the Law, the School ...
Under Australian mental health laws, people with schizophrenia can only be involuntarily committed t...
Compulsory interventions severely restrict constitutional rights of the patients. They are exception...
This article begins and ends with a call for more empirical research to understand the connection be...
Involuntary psychiatric treatment occurs under such conditions as the medicating or placing in treat...
Unfortunately, the typical exposure to mental illness for most Americans comes via tragic mass shoot...
Prof. Cohen and I answer six questions: (1) Why do we lock people up? (2) How can involuntary civil ...
This article begins with an in-depth discussion of the UCLA incident followed by the history of prot...
Background: Involuntary treatment is a key issue in healthcare ethics. In this study, ethical issues...
Mass shootings, such as the killing of school children and staff in Newtown, Connecticut, have provi...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...
The issues surrounding the legal responsibility of caring for and maintaining a person with a mental...
Acute episodes of mental illness temporarily destroy the capacity required to give informed consent ...
Global mental health, as a field, has focused on both increasing access to mental health services an...
Medical advances have led to statutory changes and common law overrulings. This paper argues that su...
This paper was prepared for presentation at the Conference on Mental Health and the Law, the School ...
Under Australian mental health laws, people with schizophrenia can only be involuntarily committed t...
Compulsory interventions severely restrict constitutional rights of the patients. They are exception...
This article begins and ends with a call for more empirical research to understand the connection be...
Involuntary psychiatric treatment occurs under such conditions as the medicating or placing in treat...
Unfortunately, the typical exposure to mental illness for most Americans comes via tragic mass shoot...
Prof. Cohen and I answer six questions: (1) Why do we lock people up? (2) How can involuntary civil ...
This article begins with an in-depth discussion of the UCLA incident followed by the history of prot...
Background: Involuntary treatment is a key issue in healthcare ethics. In this study, ethical issues...