Literature DB >> 1601403

Are pretrial commitments for forensic evaluation used to control nuisance behavior?

K L Appelbaum1, W H Fisher, Z Nestelbaum, A Batemen.   

Abstract

The shift to dangerousness-oriented civil commitment criteria has led to speculation that mentally ill persons who do not meet those criteria are being hospitalized under criminal commitment statutes. Using data on patients' psychiatric symptoms at admission to a state hospital in Massachusetts, the authors retrospectively assessed whether patients charged with minor criminal offenses who were committed for evaluation of competence to stand trial would have met civil commitment criteria. The data suggest that most mentally ill patients who were criminally committed could have been civilly committed. However, a relatively greater proportion of persons with substance abuse, mental retardation, or other conditions who did not meet civil commitment criteria for mental illness were committed for pretrial evaluation.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1601403     DOI: 10.1176/ps.43.6.603

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hosp Community Psychiatry        ISSN: 0022-1597


  3 in total

1.  Beyond criminalization: toward a criminologically informed framework for mental health policy and services research.

Authors:  William H Fisher; Eric Silver; Nancy Wolff
Journal:  Adm Policy Ment Health       Date:  2006-09

Review 2.  Horizons of context: understanding the police decision to arrest people with mental illness.

Authors:  Melissa Schaefer Morabito
Journal:  Psychiatr Serv       Date:  2007-12       Impact factor: 3.084

3.  Self-reported lifetime psychiatric hospitalization histories of jail detainees with mental disorders: comparison with a non-incarcerated national sample.

Authors:  William H Fisher; Ira K Packer; Steven M Banks; David Smith; Lorna J Simon; Kristen Roy-Bujnowski
Journal:  J Behav Health Serv Res       Date:  2002-11       Impact factor: 1.505

  3 in total

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