This thesis explores the ethical territory charted by a relatively recent development in the treatment of the severely and persistently mentally ill, mandatory outpatient treatment (MOT). MOT is designed to treat patients who make a fair recovery from illness when they take their prescribed medications consistently, but who repeatedly quit taking their medication, only to suffer a series of relapses which result in involuntary commitment in psychiatric hospitals. For these individuals, MOT is believed to be a less restrictive alternative to inpatient commitment, and better method of preventing relapse than current patterns of repeated hospitalization. The thesis explores four areas of significant debate within the context of mandatory outpa...
Commitment to outpatient psychiatric treatment evolved in the courts to protect patients ' righ...
When determining if involuntary treatment is appropriate, the proper question for courts to ask is n...
I. Introduction: The (Perceived) Need for Outpatient Commitment II. Commitment to Outpatient Treatme...
In mental health policy, a central ethical dilemma concerns involuntary outpatient commitment (OPC),...
Compulsory interventions severely restrict constitutional rights of the patients. They are exception...
Over the recent years, increased attention has been paid to non-compliance by mentally disordered pa...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...
Mass shootings, such as the killing of school children and staff in Newtown, Connecticut, have provi...
Treating people with mental disorder without their consent always has been the defining human rights...
This paper reviews the debate over civil commitment to outpatient settings of people with mental ill...
Canadians with a mental disorder as their sole underlying condition (MDSUMC) are still unable to acc...
Many contemporary models of medical ethics champion patient autonomy to counterbalance historically ...
There is a well-documented “shuttle process” by which individuals committed to psychiatric instituti...
A recent survey of state statutes for outpatient commitment (Torrey and Kaplan, 1995) indicates that...
In this article, Professor Gunn discusses autonomy, consent and compulsion in mental health treatmen...
Commitment to outpatient psychiatric treatment evolved in the courts to protect patients ' righ...
When determining if involuntary treatment is appropriate, the proper question for courts to ask is n...
I. Introduction: The (Perceived) Need for Outpatient Commitment II. Commitment to Outpatient Treatme...
In mental health policy, a central ethical dilemma concerns involuntary outpatient commitment (OPC),...
Compulsory interventions severely restrict constitutional rights of the patients. They are exception...
Over the recent years, increased attention has been paid to non-compliance by mentally disordered pa...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...
Mass shootings, such as the killing of school children and staff in Newtown, Connecticut, have provi...
Treating people with mental disorder without their consent always has been the defining human rights...
This paper reviews the debate over civil commitment to outpatient settings of people with mental ill...
Canadians with a mental disorder as their sole underlying condition (MDSUMC) are still unable to acc...
Many contemporary models of medical ethics champion patient autonomy to counterbalance historically ...
There is a well-documented “shuttle process” by which individuals committed to psychiatric instituti...
A recent survey of state statutes for outpatient commitment (Torrey and Kaplan, 1995) indicates that...
In this article, Professor Gunn discusses autonomy, consent and compulsion in mental health treatmen...
Commitment to outpatient psychiatric treatment evolved in the courts to protect patients ' righ...
When determining if involuntary treatment is appropriate, the proper question for courts to ask is n...
I. Introduction: The (Perceived) Need for Outpatient Commitment II. Commitment to Outpatient Treatme...