Psychiatric Bulletin (2005) 29: 352. doi: 10.1192/pb.29.9.352-a
© 2005 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2005) 29: 352
© 2005 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
What is the role of a community forensic mental health team?
Trevor Turner, Consultant Psychiatrist, Clinical Director and
Mark Salter, Consultant Psychiatrist
Department of Psychiatry, Homerton University Hospital, London E9
6SR
The meticulous report of John Dowsett on Measurement of risk by a
community forensic mental health team (Psychiatric Bulletin,
January 2005, 29, 9-12) illustrates nicely the use of a standard risk
assessment instrument, the HCR-20, in an inner city context. The high scores
on the historical scale of the eight (out of 47) patients who re-offended in
the 2.5 years following data collection very much reflect that adage of
forensic psychiatrists, that previous violence is the core predictor of future
violence.
However, although harbouring doubts about the limits of risk assessment
(e.g. Szmukler, G., Homicide inquiries: What sense do they
make?, Psychiatric Bulletin, January 2000, 24, 6-10) we
consider that pragmatic reviews, such as this study, more importantly call
into question the role of a forensic community team. For reasons of history,
resource limitations and serendipity, in City and Hackney (an equivalent
inner-city area) we have no such agency, restricted patients being routinely
handed over to the community mental health teams. These do have an integrated
forensic community psychiatric nurse, but the forensic/general psychiatry
interface is of the simplest indoor/outdoor type. Dowsetts report that
there are a number of patients in his team who have remained stable for
some years (and therefore could perhaps be handed back to
generic services were it not for the fact that they committed a very serious
offence) certainly reflects part of our own experience with restricted
individuals. They are often easier to manage than many
non-forensic patients, because the nature of the restriction
order and their history of institutionalisation generates therapeutic and
social control.
Likewise, another group of Dowsetts patients are noted to be
perfectly manageable on ordinary acute wards, and again he considers that
there would be advantages, in terms of quick admission, were they to be
managed by a local generic service. His third group, namely those with what
might be termed historically established criminality also do not
benefit from a forensic team, since there is no specific
psychological intervention known to have an impact. In which case, why have an
expensive resource looking after such individuals, with no
evidence of benefit given that criminality, per se, is not a treatable
disorder. The cynic might even suggest that maintenance of a stable mental
state in such a group enhances their likelihood of offending.
If such findings reflect the case-load of forensic mental health teams
elsewhere, and anecdotal reports very much suggest this is the case, then is
there not an urgent need to rethink the notion of a separate forensic
capacity? As Dowsett has pointed out, it is important for forensic services to
demonstrate expertise in managing this criminal group, but use
of the HCR-20 is not especially difficult and reintegration with generic
community mental health teams would perhaps be a much better option. It would
help break down the often difficult interface issues of parallel teams, would
enhance resources for those who do benefit from psychiatric input and would
put the issue of risk exactly where it belongs, at the heart of all routine
clinical practice. In its current specialist location it sustains the
de-skilling and as yet unproven notion that an expert elsewhere may be able to
manage risk more effectively. It might even enable psychiatry to withdraw from
its untenable and exposed position that has made us the whipping boys of the
governments public safety agenda.
eLetters:
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