Researchers, policymakers, law professionals and lived experience alike are challenged as to the legal and ethical bounds around which practitioners can act with beneficence when considering compulsory treatment of an individual with an eating disorder. A Rapid Review was commissioned by the Victorian ...
In addiction treatment, coercion usually refers to legal forms of coercion that involve the use of the state’s power to force individuals to undergo treatment, either in response to conviction for a drug-related crime (e.g., as in drug courts) or as a form of mandated or compulsory treat...
Conclusion In general, senior psychiatrists tend to support the use of compulsory treatment to protect the health of patients at risk and also to protect the welfare of patients in their best interests. In particular, eating disorder specialists tend to support the compulsory treatment of patients ...
The act of June 17, 1998 created a new form of compulsory treatment: the injunction to care. This is a legal measure intended to fight against recidivism o... O Halleguen,A Baratta - 《Lencéphale》 被引量: 21发表: 2014年 When Does the "Duty to Protect" Apply with a Client Who ha...
the person must have a mental disorder or disability of mind (alcohol or drug addiction alone are insufficient to detain a person under the Act), require hospital detention for assessment or treatment, and the detention must be necessary in the interests of the patient's health or safety, or...
In general, senior psychiatrists tend to support the use of compulsory treatment to protect the health of patients at risk and also to protect the welfare of patients in their best interests. In particular, eating disorder specialists tend to support the compulsory treatment of patients with anorexi...
Conclusion In general, senior psychiatrists tend to support the use of compulsory treatment to protect the health of patients at risk and also to protect the welfare of patients in their best interests. In particular, eating disorder specialists tend to support the compulsory treatment of patients ...
Compulsory community treatment (CCT) of people with serious mental health problems is analysed using the bioethical principles of autonomy and beneficence. Feminist ethical theory is then used to clarify these principles as they relate to community commitment of the severely and persistently mentally ill...
Psychological models of mental disorder, human rights, and compulsory mental health care in the community benefit to people in terms of more appropriate treatment, or be a least restrictive alternative, or better preserve the person's private and family life... P Kinderman,S Tai - 《International...
Objective Anorexia nervosa (AN) is a mental disorder potentially leading to severe malnutrition and life‐threatening complications, with high mortality rates and dropouts from treatment. In the most severe cases, treatment refusal associated with acute nutritional disorders may require compulsory admission...