Psychiatric Bulletin (2000) 24: 276. doi: 10.1192/pb.24.7.276-a
© 2000 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2000) 24: 276
© 2000 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Use of Section 62 in clinical practice
Camilla Haw, Consultant Psychiatrist and
Ranji Shanmugarutnum, Associate Specialist
St Andrew's Hospital, Billing Road, Northampton NN1 5DG
Sir : Like Johnson & Curtice (Psychiatric Bulletin, April
2000, 24, 154), we have also audited the use of Section 62 (urgent
treatment). We studied all Section 62 forms completed at St Andrew's Hospital
during 1997. A total of 55 forms were audited, 53 authorising medication and
two authorising electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). This contrasts with Johnston
& Curtice who found Section 62 was used exclusively for ECT. These
findings are likely to be due to differences in patient characteristics
between the two studies. St Andrew's has many tertiary NHS referrals including
forensic patients, whereas Johnson & Curtice were studying patients of a
local psychiatric service.
In our audit, aggression towards self or others and generally disturbed
behaviour were the most common reasons for using Section 62. Antipsychotics
followed by benzodiazepines were the most frequently administered medicines.
In 33 instances patients receiving treatment authorised by Form 39 urgently
required additional medication to that certified. Fourteen patients withdrew
their consent to treatment at the same time displaying an urgent need for
medication. A disproportionate number of Section 62 cases involved adolescent
female patients. In virtually all cases treatment authorised by Section 62
appeared genuinely urgent.
We are concerned about the Government Green Paper Reform of the Mental
Health Act 1983. It proposes that the threshold for administering
emergency medication be increased such that merely preventing violence or
self-harm would not be sufficient grounds to authorise urgent treatment. This
raises concern about staff and patient safety particularly in forensic
settings. Psychiatrists will no longer be able to give urgent ECT to patients
who lack capacity or do not consent but must wait for authorisation from a
second opinion appointed doctor (SOAD). In our audit SOADs took a mean of 4.8
days to visit and complete Form 39 after Section 62 had been used. If made law
this measure is likely to increase the suffering and morbidity of severely
depressed patients.