Download Day 26 & 27: Ethical and Legal issues

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Legal and Ethical Issues
Chapter 14
Mental Health and the Legal System:
An Overview
 A variety of legal and ethical issues exist in regard
to mental health and abnormal psychology



The nature of civil vs. criminal commitment
Balancing ethical considerations vs. legal considerations
The role of psychologists in legal matters



Expert witnesses, forensic psychology
Rights of patients and research subjects
Practice standards and the changing face of mental health
care
Civil Commitment: Overview, Criteria,
and Oversight Authority
 Civil Commitment Laws
 Address legal declaration of mental illness
 Address when a person can be placed in a hospital or institution
for treatment
 Such laws and what constitutes mental illness vary by state
 "Mental illness" means a substantial disorder of thought, mood,
perception, psychological orientation or memory that significantly
impairs judgment, behavior, capacity to recognize reality or
ability to meet the ordinary demands of life; (OS §43A-1-103-3)
 Dangerousness to Self or Others: Central to Commitment
Proceedings


Assessing dangerousness: The role of mental health professionals
Knowns and unknowns about violence and mental illness
Civil Commitment
 General Criteria for Civil Commitment


Demonstrate that a person has a mental illness and needs
treatment (often exclude substance use/abuse)
Show that the person is dangerous to self or others



Bias based on gender, race/ethnicity
Predicting groups with higher likelihood of dangerous behavior
vs predicting individual’s likelihood of dangerous beh.
Establish a grave disability – Inability to care for self
 Governmental Authority Over Civil Commitment


Police power – Protection of the health, welfare, and safety
of society
Parens patriae – State acts a surrogate parent
Civil Commitment - Changes
 Supreme Court cases prohibit confinement of
nondangerous person who is capable of surviving by
self or with help of willing & responsible family or
friends
 More restrictive commitment laws may result in
mentally ill being jailed for criminal offenses
 Deinstitutionalization movement led to increase in
homelessness rate


Of the 2.5 – 3.5 million homeless, 25-30% are mentally ill
Lack of community mental health facilities to replace large
inpatient hospitals
The Civil Commitment Process
 Initial Stages (OK)



Protective custody
Emergency Evaluation (<12 hours)
Emergency Detention (<72 hours)
 Subsequent Stages


Involve normal legal proceedings in most cases
Determination is made by a judge regarding whether to
commit the person
Criminal Commitment
 Insanity Defense




M’Naghten Rule – do not know nature & quality of act
performing, or did not know act was wrong
Irresistible impulse – even if aware that act was wrong, no
longer had power to choose between right & wrong (lacked
free agency)
Durham Rule – was criminal act the result of mental
disorder?
American law Institute Standard – because of mental
illness/defect, must lack capacity to understand criminality
of behavior or to avoid it (M’Naghten & Irresistible
impulse); but cannot be result of antisocial or repeated
criminal behavior
 Insanity Defense (cont’d)
 Insanity Defense Reform Act (1984) if due to mental illness or
mental retardation unable to appreciate wrongfulness of conduct
at the time of the offense
 Diminished capacity – mental illness can diminish ability to
understand nature and impact of one’s behavior; issue of intent
 Public perception of frequency of insanity defense and the
time of hospitalization is highly inaccurate


Fewer than 1% cases use insanity defense
Length of hospitalization often longer than prison term if had
been convicted of the crime
 Guilty but Mentally Ill – convicted, but either go to prison or
mental hospital, or combination of 2 (sentence given)
Competency to Stand Trial
 Must be able to participate in own defense,
understand the legal proceedings
 Typically sent to mental facility for treatment, if
regain competency may then be brought to trial or
may never be brought to trial
Patient’s Rights: An Overview
 The Right to Treatment


Mentally ill persons cannot be involuntarily committed
without treatment
Treatment includes active efforts to reduce symptoms and
provide humane care
 The Right to the Least Restrictive Alternative

Treatment within the least confining and limiting
environment
 The Right to Refuse Treatment


Often in cases involving medical or drug treatment
Persons cannot be forced to become competent via taking
antipsychotic medication
Patient’s Rights: An Overview (cont.)
 The Right to Confidentiality vs. Duty to Warn


Confidentiality – Protection of disclosure of personal
information
Limits to confidentiality




Duty to Warn – Tarasoff
Suspicion of neglect or abuse of children or “vulnerable
adults”
Court order
Releases of Information
 The Right to Informed Consent



Nature of treatment proposed
Conditions of treatment, including confidentiality
Alternatives to treatment
Research Participant Rights: An Overview
 The Right to be Informed About the Research

Involves informed consent, not simply consent alone
 The Right to Privacy
 Right to be Treated with Respect and Dignity
 Right to be Protected from Physical and Mental
Harm
 Right to Chose or to Refuse to Participate in
Research Without Negative Consequences
 Right to Anonymity with Regard to Reporting of
Study Findings
 Right to Safeguarding of Records
Clinical Practice Guidelines and Standards
 Agency for Health Care Policy and Research



Focus on delivery of efficient and cost-effective mental
health services
Dissemination of relevant state-of-the-art information to
practitioners
Establish clinical practice guidelines for assessment and
treatment
 American Psychological Association’s Practice
Guidelines



Standards for clinical efficacy research
Standards for clinical effectiveness research
Examples include APA Division 12 list of empiricallysupported treatments