The involuntary confinement of the mentally ill creates disquieting tensions for a society which in other ways of life values the liberty of the individual. Opposing wishes to neglect and to care, to protect and to abandon can be identified in involuntary commitment proceedings; therefore, no conflict-free resolution of the problems inherent in such deprivations of liberty is possible. Recently, in order to mitigate the deprivations suffered, the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals in Rouse v. Cameron has invoked the principle that individuals so confined have an enforceable right to treatment. Some of the possible consequences of this right, however, bring into sharper focus the uneasiness about current practices of involun...
Recently, the courts have recognized the right to a minimum level of mental health treatment for ind...
Commitment to outpatient psychiatric treatment evolved in the courts to protect patients ' righ...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...
The moral right of mental patients to adequate care and treatment has long been recognized in our so...
Dr. Birnbaum has presented in a most eloquent fashion his case for the right to treatment. His posit...
O\u27Connor v. Donaldson, 422 U.S. 563 (1975). A constitutionally based right to treatment for the c...
That which is most clear in any debate over proper care for the mentally ill is the need for an imme...
In May, 1960, an editorial in the American Bar Association Journal condemned the understaffing and o...
For all too many years, few people gave much thought to the civil rights of hospitalized mental pati...
The states have traditionally exercised broad power to commit the mentally ill. Civil commitment of ...
“The only freedom which deserves the name is that of pursuing our own good in our own way, so long a...
Plaintiff Kenneth Donaldson, a former state mental patient, brought an action for damages under 42 U...
The theory of a right to treatment was first presented to the public in 1960 by the lawyer-physici...
For the past three decades, scholars have carefully considered the scope of the right of involuntari...
When determining if involuntary treatment is appropriate, the proper question for courts to ask is n...
Recently, the courts have recognized the right to a minimum level of mental health treatment for ind...
Commitment to outpatient psychiatric treatment evolved in the courts to protect patients ' righ...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...
The moral right of mental patients to adequate care and treatment has long been recognized in our so...
Dr. Birnbaum has presented in a most eloquent fashion his case for the right to treatment. His posit...
O\u27Connor v. Donaldson, 422 U.S. 563 (1975). A constitutionally based right to treatment for the c...
That which is most clear in any debate over proper care for the mentally ill is the need for an imme...
In May, 1960, an editorial in the American Bar Association Journal condemned the understaffing and o...
For all too many years, few people gave much thought to the civil rights of hospitalized mental pati...
The states have traditionally exercised broad power to commit the mentally ill. Civil commitment of ...
“The only freedom which deserves the name is that of pursuing our own good in our own way, so long a...
Plaintiff Kenneth Donaldson, a former state mental patient, brought an action for damages under 42 U...
The theory of a right to treatment was first presented to the public in 1960 by the lawyer-physici...
For the past three decades, scholars have carefully considered the scope of the right of involuntari...
When determining if involuntary treatment is appropriate, the proper question for courts to ask is n...
Recently, the courts have recognized the right to a minimum level of mental health treatment for ind...
Commitment to outpatient psychiatric treatment evolved in the courts to protect patients ' righ...
The following will examine both involuntary commitment and deinstitutionalization, as well as some r...