Background: Consent to treatment is a cornerstone of medical ethics and law. Nevertheless, very little empirical evidence is available to inform clinicians and policymakers regarding the capacities of forensic patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSDs) to make decisions about their treatment, with the risk of clinical and legal inertia, silent coercion, stigmatization, or ill-conceived reforms. Study Design: In this multinational study, we assessed and compared with treatment-related decisional capacities in forensic and non-forensic patients with SSD. 160 forensic and 139 non-forensic patients were used in Austria, Germany, Italy, Poland, and England. Their capacity to consent to treatment was assessed by means of the MacArth...
Despite the growing amount of data, much information is needed on patients' mental capacity to conse...
Objectives To asses competence to consent to treatment in involuntary committed patients (ICP) for ...
In this paper, the second of two, we consider the capacity of those assessed with respect to their a...
AbstractBackgroundConsent to treatment is a cornerstone of medical ethics and law. Nevertheless, ver...
Mental health legislation is often criticised for being fundamentally inconsistent with a rights-bas...
Aims. To evaluate treatment decision-making capacity (DMC) to consent to psychiatric treatment in in...
Abstract Background The process of assessing the decision-making capacity of potential subjects befo...
AIMS: To evaluate treatment decision-making capacity (DMC) to consent to psychiatric treatment in i...
BackgroundIs the nature of decision-making capacity (DMC) for treatment significantly different in m...
Despite the growing amount of data, much information is needed on patients' mental capacity to conse...
BackgroundIs the nature of decision-making capacity (DMC) for treatment significantly different in m...
With the growth in recent years of studies of decisional ca-pacity for research among people with sc...
The ability of psychiatric patients and prisoners to provide informed consent to participate in clin...
Studies of patients with schizophrenia and offenders with severe mental disorders decision-making pe...
Decisional capacity to consent is an emerging ethical and legal concept, and is closely related to s...
Despite the growing amount of data, much information is needed on patients' mental capacity to conse...
Objectives To asses competence to consent to treatment in involuntary committed patients (ICP) for ...
In this paper, the second of two, we consider the capacity of those assessed with respect to their a...
AbstractBackgroundConsent to treatment is a cornerstone of medical ethics and law. Nevertheless, ver...
Mental health legislation is often criticised for being fundamentally inconsistent with a rights-bas...
Aims. To evaluate treatment decision-making capacity (DMC) to consent to psychiatric treatment in in...
Abstract Background The process of assessing the decision-making capacity of potential subjects befo...
AIMS: To evaluate treatment decision-making capacity (DMC) to consent to psychiatric treatment in i...
BackgroundIs the nature of decision-making capacity (DMC) for treatment significantly different in m...
Despite the growing amount of data, much information is needed on patients' mental capacity to conse...
BackgroundIs the nature of decision-making capacity (DMC) for treatment significantly different in m...
With the growth in recent years of studies of decisional ca-pacity for research among people with sc...
The ability of psychiatric patients and prisoners to provide informed consent to participate in clin...
Studies of patients with schizophrenia and offenders with severe mental disorders decision-making pe...
Decisional capacity to consent is an emerging ethical and legal concept, and is closely related to s...
Despite the growing amount of data, much information is needed on patients' mental capacity to conse...
Objectives To asses competence to consent to treatment in involuntary committed patients (ICP) for ...
In this paper, the second of two, we consider the capacity of those assessed with respect to their a...