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Doctors and lawyers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

A. I. F. Simpson*
Affiliation:
Auckland Regional Forensic Psychiatry Service, PB 19986, Avondale, Auckland, New Zealand. E-mail: sandy.simpson@waitematadhb.govt.nz
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © 2005 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

Sarkar & Adshead (Reference Sarkar and Adshead2005) present important issues regarding the nature of the relationship between psychiatrists and patients in the process of judicial hearings, focusing particularly on the conflict that may arise from differing roles. There are two points I wish to add.

First, the outcome of hearings is very much a result of the behaviour of all players present, and there are ways as clinicians we may work to reduce harm that may arise from them. During reform of the Mental Health Act in New Zealand in the early 1990s, very similar dynamics emerged between judges, counsel for patients (always provided in New Zealand), review tribunal members and psychiatrists acting as responsible clinicians under the Act. To address these difficulties, the New Zealand Law Society recommended that counsel take on a ‘best outcomes’ approach, assisting the patient to achieve the best they could, rather than strictly following the letter of the patient's instructions (Reference McCarthy and SimpsonMcCarthy & Simpson, 1996). Such recommendations decreased damaging adversarial exchanges in committal and tribunal hearings, because of an awareness that ‘juridogenic’ harm could be long-lasting, and that such hearings were not criminal ones.

We also noted that the behaviour of clinicians could have a significant impact on how coercive or procedurally fair committal processes were for the patient. It came to be recommended that the psychiatrist shares their report to the tribunal with the patient and their counsel, and works through the issue of agreement or disagreement with the patient in advance of the hearing (Ministry of Health, 1997). This appears to have reduced possible negative impacts on the therapeutic relationship and may increase the patient's satisfaction because of their sense of having received an opportunity to voice their opinion and scrutinise the basis of their detention. Such an outcome can be achieved if the process is managed openly by psychiatrists, and in an inquisitorial but non-confrontational manner by legal officers.

Second, civil committal is not simply a loss of liberty, but a focused loss of liberty whose purpose is the restoration or maximising of autonomy, for a person whose competence is lowered by mental illness. Liberty is therefore restored through detention and treatment, unlike other forms of state-mandated detention (e.g. detention that is motivated as punishment and public protection). Sadly, civil committal is increasingly being misused overtly or covertly for primary public protective purposes alone, in the absence of a competence-lowering disorder. One senses that some of Sarkar & Adshead's concern relates to the committal hearings for the latter group of ‘patients’. In ‘dangerous and severe personality disorder’ one is acting for security needs, with limited therapeutic health impact. In ‘dangerous and severe schizophrenia’ one is acting for the health needs of the patient, if the risk is symptom driven, and protecting the public is secondary. The due process protections necessary for these two different uses of civil committal may indeed need differing hearings.

References

McCarthy, S. & Simpson, A. I. F. (1996) Running a Case Under the Mental Health Act 1992 and Related Legislation. Wellington: New Zealand Law Society.Google Scholar
Ministry of Health (1997) Guidelines to the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act 1992. Wellington: Ministry of Health.Google Scholar
Sarkar, S. P. & Adshead, G. (2005) Black robes and white coats: who will win the new mental health tribunals? British Journal of Psychiatry, 186, 9698.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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