This paper presents a user/survivor researcher perspective to the debate among psychiatrists on the suggested introduction of Community Treatment Orders in Ireland. Critical questions are raised about evidence and the construction of psychiatric knowledge. Important questions include: How is this evidence created? What and whose knowledge have not been considered? Some critical issues around coercion, ‘insight’, and attributions of ‘lack of capacity’ are briefly considered. Further legal considerations are then introduced based on the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability. The paper concludes with a human rights-based appeal to reject the introduction of coercive community treatment in Ir...
Objective: Coercion is a controversial issue in mental health care. Recent research highlights that ...
peer-reviewedThere is very little critical analysis of the relatively new policy of Service User Inv...
Persons with Disabilities addressed specifically to users and survivors of psychiatry. This manual d...
BACKGROUND: Coercion has always existed in psychiatry and is increasingly debated. The 'move into th...
Background: Coercion has always existed in psychiatry and is increasingly debated. The 'move into th...
This paper compares legislation on clinical research conducted on patients subject to coercion in th...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2002 Dr. Julie JohnstoneThis thesis argues that current t...
This paper is an exploratory study of ways of talking about mental health. Drawing upon data collect...
Survivor-controlled research in the field of mental health can be perceived as the most extended dev...
The thesis examines the extent to which medicalism and legalism have influenced the legal powers of ...
This article argues that civil mental health laws operate to constrict how people think, understand,...
The papers by Plumb, Beresford and colleagues, Thomas, and Spandler and Calton which were a point of...
non-peer-reviewedIntroduction: The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilit...
This paper presents findings from an interdisciplinary project undertaken in Victoria, Australia, in...
Mental health laws worldwide authorise involuntary hospitalisation and treatment of persons with men...
Objective: Coercion is a controversial issue in mental health care. Recent research highlights that ...
peer-reviewedThere is very little critical analysis of the relatively new policy of Service User Inv...
Persons with Disabilities addressed specifically to users and survivors of psychiatry. This manual d...
BACKGROUND: Coercion has always existed in psychiatry and is increasingly debated. The 'move into th...
Background: Coercion has always existed in psychiatry and is increasingly debated. The 'move into th...
This paper compares legislation on clinical research conducted on patients subject to coercion in th...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2002 Dr. Julie JohnstoneThis thesis argues that current t...
This paper is an exploratory study of ways of talking about mental health. Drawing upon data collect...
Survivor-controlled research in the field of mental health can be perceived as the most extended dev...
The thesis examines the extent to which medicalism and legalism have influenced the legal powers of ...
This article argues that civil mental health laws operate to constrict how people think, understand,...
The papers by Plumb, Beresford and colleagues, Thomas, and Spandler and Calton which were a point of...
non-peer-reviewedIntroduction: The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilit...
This paper presents findings from an interdisciplinary project undertaken in Victoria, Australia, in...
Mental health laws worldwide authorise involuntary hospitalisation and treatment of persons with men...
Objective: Coercion is a controversial issue in mental health care. Recent research highlights that ...
peer-reviewedThere is very little critical analysis of the relatively new policy of Service User Inv...
Persons with Disabilities addressed specifically to users and survivors of psychiatry. This manual d...