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Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical School and Oxleas NHS Trust, Upton Day Hospital, 14 Upton Road, Kent DA6 8LQ
Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical School and Oxleas NHS Trust, Room 19, Memorial Hospital, Shooters Hill, London SE18 3RZ
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Abstract |
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A postal audit of practice in the South-East Thames Region of England before and after the Bournewood judgements.
RESULTS
There was a trebling in the rate of admission under section of elderly incapacitated patients occurred prior to the House of Lords' ruling. By the time of the ruling many consultants had not changed their practice. There is now, however, no impact of the ruling upon clinical practice. The majority of consultants remain concerned about the lack of safeguards for mentally incapacitated elders at the present time.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Although the Bournewood judgement was expected by some to have a permanent impact upon the management of the mentally incapacitated this has not happened. There is a need for effective and resource efficient safeguards for the mentally incapacitated to be developed.
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Introduction |
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Although the judgement was unanimously overturned, Lord Steyn (House of Lords, 1998) believed that the result was "an indefensible gap in our mental health law". He said "the general effect of the decision of the House of Lords is to leave the compliant incapacitated patients without the safeguards enshrined in the Act of 1983" and lamented the fact that "the common law principle of necessity contains none of the safeguards of the Act of 1983". He concluded by asserting that "there is no reason to withhold the specific and effective protections of the Act of 1983 from a large class of vulnerable mentally incapacitated adults. Some opinion at the time of the Lords ruling suggested, that the issue of mental capacity had come to stay, and that changes in practice which resulted from the COA judgement would be permanent and consolidate further (Eastman, 1998).
The UK government (Department of Health, 1998) issued guidelines after the House of Lords' ruling advising informal admission of compliant incapacitated patients but suggesting regular assessment of capacity during admission, consultation with relatives and/or carers, and visits by hospital managers or advocates if no-one from outside the hospital would otherwise take a continuing interest in their care.
The revised edition of the Mental Health Act Code of Practice (Department of Health & Welsh Office, 1999) has since been published and advises the informal admission of the mentally incapacitated and their treatment under the common law doctrine of necessity. Reference is made to consultation with immediate relatives and carers, but no other formal safeguards are recommended.
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The study |
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Findings |
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Discussion |
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Following the House of Lords judgement the detention rate appears to have returned to the pattern that pertained prior to the COA judgement. This suggests that the impact of the Bournewood case is now minimal and that the predicted permanent change in psychiatric care of the mentally incapacitated (Eastman, 1998) has not occurred. Even though around half the responding consultants felt that the judgement had had an impact upon their practice, there is no evidence of a continuing impact from the Bournewood judgement on clinical practice.
Although the Mental Health Act may not provide an ideal framework for the safeguarding of the mentally incapacitated, the effective absence of safeguards must, however, remain as concerning now as it was, last year, to Lord Steyn. At the present time in the UK, legislation is being considered that will change the management of the mentally incapacitated. A proposed revision of the Mental Health Act is considering the use of capacity as the key basis for detention, and the Government's proposals on mental incapacity have suggested the establishment of formal proxies for decision-making (Lord Chancellors Department, 1997).
Over two-thirds of responding consultants agree that the lack of safeguards is a problem. There is a risk, however, that if new processes were cumbersome, they might effectively obstruct the delivery of health care to the incapacitated. In our view the challenge now is to establish those safeguards in a way that is both effective as well as an efficient use of resources.
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References |
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & WELSH OFFICE (1999) Mental Health Act Code of Practice. London: The Stationery Office.
EASTMAN, N. (1998) Bournewood: an indefensible gap in
mental health law. British Medical Journal,
317, 94-95.
HOUSE OF LORDS (1998) R. v. Bournewood Community Mental Health NHS Trust ex part L. (by his next friend). House of Lords Judgement, 25th June 1998.
LORD CHANCELLOR'S DEPARTMENT (1997) Who decides? Making Decisions on Behalf of Mentally Incapacitated Adults. London: The Stationery Office.
ROYAL COMMISSION (1957) Royal Commission on the Law Relating to Mental Illness and Mental Deficiency, 1954-1957. London: HMSO.
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