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South London and Maudsley NHS Trust, Lambeth Hospital, London
College Research Unit, Royal College of Psychiatrists, London, and Directorate of General Adult Psychiatry, Oxfordshire Mental Healthcare NHS Trust, Littlemore Hospital, Oxford, email: rchaplin{at}cru.rcpsych.ac.uk
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Abstract |
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This study aimed to determine the proportion of patients hospitalised with mania who had capacity to consent to treatment, to determine the predictors of capacity and to explore the relationship between detained status and capacity. Fifty in-patients with mania participated in a clinical interview to assess capacity.
RESULTS
Nineteen patients (38%) had overall capacity. Capacity was predicted by higher IQ, lower severity of manic symptoms and more episodes of depression; it was not related to voluntary or detained status. The domains of capacity were not hierarchical.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Many patients hospitalised with mania have capacity to make an informed choice regarding treatment even when compulsorily detained. Their capacity should be reviewed frequently and measures adopted to enhance capacity.
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Introduction |
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This study had the primary aim of determining the proportion of hospitalised patients with acute mania who had capacity to consent to acute drug treatment. Secondary aims were to investigate the factors that predict whether a patient has capacity, to explore the relationship between detained status and capacity to consent to treatment and to investigate whether there is a hierarchical relationship between the domains of capacity.
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Method |
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Each patient was interviewed by a specialist registrar. Initially, the YMRS was administered and those scoring 20 or more proceeded with the rest of the interview. Administration of the National Adult Reading Test (NART; Nelson, 1982) yielded a premorbid estimation of IQ. From this interview (and from perusal of the case notes) the following data were obtained: basic demographic details; voluntary or detained status; length of illness; number of illness episodes; alcohol (units) and illicit substances consumed in the week preceding admission; and educational level achieved.
Each patients capacity to consent to their treatment was assessed using a clinical interview based on the definition of capacity as laid out in the Code of Practice of the Mental Health Act 1983 (Department of Health, 1999) and the British Medical Association and Law Society Guidelines (British Medical Association & Law Society, 1995). The assessment was designed to give a global judgement of capacity based on a clinical interview. Personalised information about diagnosis, treatment and its risks and benefits was initially disclosed to the patient. The following information was disclosed: three prominent features of the illness, one current medication (preferably a mood stabiliser) and two current (or potential) side-effects experienced by the patient.
Capacity was then assessed along four separate domains. These domains were:
Initially we included an additional domain, relating to patients ability to believe that the information disclosed applied to them. This domain was later removed from our study, as it was not included in the definition of capacity laid out in the new Mental Capacity Act (Department for Constitutional Affairs, 2005). Patients with capacity in all domains were defined as having overall capacity. Interview transcripts of the capacity assessments made by one of the two specialist registrars were assessed by a consultant psychiatrist (R.C.) who was unaware of the identity of the interviewer and interviewee, and the percentage agreement and interrater reliability between these assessments were calculated.
Data were entered onto the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences
(SPSS) version 9.0 for Windows.
2 and independent-samples
t-tests were used to investigate the relationships between capacity and
categorical and continuous variables respectively. A logistic regression
analysis was employed to confirm independent predictors of capacity and to
eliminate the confounding effects of variables.
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Results |
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=0.68, 95% CI 0.57-0.79). Nineteen of the 50
patients (38%) were found to have overall capacity
(Table 1).
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The three domains of capacity were significantly related to each other:
retain/understand,
2=12.347, P<0.001; retain/weigh
up,
2=22.727, P<0.001; understand/weigh up
2=10.080, P=0.001. There was no relationship between
capacity and voluntary or detained status (
2=0.801,
P=0.37), with approximately equal numbers of both groups of patients
having capacity. Univariate analysis (Table
2) showed that capacity was predicted by prescription of a mood
stabiliser, greater number of depressive episodes, lower YMRS score and higher
IQ.
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Logistic regression analysis found the following variables to be independent predictors of capacity:
Prescription of a mood stabiliser was no longer a predictor of capacity. Owing to the small number of patients in each category of number of depressive episodes, the odds ratios here are not well estimated, highlighted by their magnitude and the width of the confidence intervals. In a separate analysis the correlation between number of depressive episodes and length of illness was not significant (Spearmans r=0.227, P=0.143).
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Discussion |
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In our study, although the capacity scores obtained in each domain were significantly related to one another, there was no evidence that the relationship between the domains was a hierarchical one. In practice this means there was no support for the concept that some domains of capacity are more basic than others, being relatively preserved, whereas others are more likely to be lost in individuals with more severe illness. Nearly all patients were able to communicate a choice, so this domain was not in any way discriminatory in the overall capacity assessment.
The finding that higher IQ predicted capacity suggests that intellectual ability is important in the ability to manipulate information about treatment. The inverse relationship between capacity and severity of mental illness has been further strengthened by this study. We found that increasing severity of manic symptoms predicted reduced capacity in patients with mania, a similar finding to that in schizophrenia, where severity of symptoms was related to reduced capacity (Grisso & Appelbaum, 1995). It is unclear from our research which specific symptoms, for example delusions or conceptual disorganisation, have the greatest negative impact on capacity. The relationship between increased previous depressive (but not manic) episodes and the presence of capacity is more difficult to explain. One possible reason is the role of insight but this needs further investigation. Insight is predictive of capacity (Cairns et al, 2005) and may be linked with the tendency to develop depressive episodes in patients with bipolar disorder (Gonzales, 2005).
This study showed that there was no relationship between a patients capacity to consent to acute drug treatment and that patients status in hospital as voluntary or detained. This implies that in our patient sample capacity had either not been assessed or had not influenced the clinicians decision to detain the patient compulsorily. This is in line with current mental health legislation in England and Wales, the Mental Health Act 1983, which is based on a status test and a risk assessment rather than an assessment of capacity. This contrasts with the assessment of capacity required when considering the use of common law to treat patients with a physical disorder. It has been argued that there is no ethical justification for having separate and legally discriminatory legislation for those requiring treatment for a mental rather than a physical disorder (Eastman & Dhar, 2000). Szmukler & Holloway (2000) argued that a capacity test should form the basis of a decision to detain patients with mental disorder and that many clinicians would favour a new Mental Health Act based on capacity. Applying mental health legislation that included a capacity clause to the patients in this study would potentially have led to some additional patients being detained, treated compulsorily and afforded rights of appeal, and some of the detained patients not being detained at all.
In conclusion, this study found that less than half of in-patients with mania had capacity to consent to treatment and that their capacity was unrelated to informal or detained status. The capacity of patients with mania should be regularly reviewed and measures should be adopted to enhance it. Further research is needed to establish the clinical utility of standardised capacity assessment in this group, and to compare the capacity of patients with mania with other clinical groups.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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