| Literature DB >> 32829740 |
D Wasserman1,2, G Apter3,4, C Baeken5,6, S Bailey1,7, J Balazs8,9, C Bec2, P Bienkowski10,11, J Bobes12,13, M F Bravo Ortiz14,15, H Brunn1,16,17, Ö Bôke18,19, N Camilleri20,21, B Carpiniello22,23,24, J Chihai25,26, E Chkonia27,28, P Courtet29,30,31, D Cozman32,33, M David3,34, G Dom35,36, A Esanu25,37, P Falkai38,39, W Flannery40,41, K Gasparyan42,43, G Gerlinger38, P Gorwood29,44, O Gudmundsson45,46, C Hanon1,47, A Heinz38,48, M J Heitor Dos Santos49,50, A Hedlund51,52, F Ismayilov53,54, N Ismayilov53,55, E T Isometsä56,57, L Izakova58,59, A Kleinberg60,61, T Kurimay22,62, S Klæbo Reitan62,63,64, D Lecic-Tosevski65,66,67, A Lehmets60,68, N Lindberg56,69, K A Lundblad51,70, G Lynch71, C Maddock71, U F Malt63,72, L Martin40,73, I Martynikhin74,75, N O Maruta76,77, F Matthys5,78, R Mazaliauskiene79,80, G Mihajlovic65,81, A Mihaljevic Peles82,83, V Miklavic84,85, P Mohr86,87, M Munarriz Ferrandis14, M Musalek1,88,89, N Neznanov74,90, G Ostorharics-Horvath8, I Pajević91,92, A Popova1,93,94, P Pregelj84,95, E Prinsen96, C Rados97,98, A Roig14,99, M Rojnic Kuzman82,83, J Samochowiec10,22,100, N Sartorius1,101, Y Savenko102, O Skugarevsky103,104, E Slodecki71, A Soghoyan42,105, D S Stone2, R Taylor-East20,21, E Terauds106,107, C Tsopelas66,108, C Tudose32,109, S Tyano1, P Vallon110, R J Van der Gaag1,111, P Varandas49,112, L Vavrusova1,58, P Voloshyn76,113, J Wancata97,114, J Wise1,115, Z Zemishlany116, F Öncü18,117, S Vahip22,118.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Compulsory admission procedures of patients with mental disorders vary between countries in Europe. The Ethics Committee of the European Psychiatric Association (EPA) launched a survey on involuntary admission procedures of patients with mental disorders in 40 countries to gather information from all National Psychiatric Associations that are members of the EPA to develop recommendations for improving involuntary admission processes and promote voluntary care.Entities:
Keywords: Awareness; European Psychiatric Association (EPA); National Psychiatric Associations (NPAs); communication; compulsory admission; education; ethics and human rights; involuntary admission; legal model; medical model; psychiatry in Europe; stigma
Year: 2020 PMID: 32829740 PMCID: PMC7576531 DOI: 10.1192/j.eurpsy.2020.79
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Psychiatry ISSN: 0924-9338 Impact factor: 5.361
Survey questions presented in this article.
| Survey | Questions | Answers | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Is there one or several laws regulating this process in your country? If yes, please send us the name of the law and translate the respective paragraphs. | Yes | No |
| 2 | Is there a requirement for an independent medical expert (e.g., psychiatrist not working in the respective hospital) to be involved? | Yes | No |
| 3 | Does the patient have a guaranteed right to a legal counselor to protect his/her rights? | Yes | No |
| 4 | Is a judge involved in making the final decision about compulsory admission? | Yes | No |
| 5 | Is there a time limit on legal decisions on compulsory admission? | Yes | No |
| 6 | Is a judge involved in reviewing the case after a certain period of time? | Yes | No |
| 8 | If there is a requirement for an independent medical expert (e.g., psychiatrist not working in the respective hospital), please specify what expertise is required. | Insert answer | |
| 10 (a) | What are the usual reasons for involuntary admissions in your country? Risk to individual’s own life. | Yes | No |
| 10 (b) | What are the usual reasons for involuntary admissions in your country? Risk to individual’s own health. | Yes | No |
| 10 (c) | What are the usual reasons for involuntary admissions in your country? Risk for self-neglect and/or homelessness. | Yes | No |
| 10 (d) | What are the usual reasons for involuntary admissions in your country? Risk of substantial decrease in social or occupational status due to psychotic disorder. | Yes | No |
| 10 (e) | What are the usual reasons for involuntary admissions in your country? Risk to other people’s safety (violence…). | Yes | No |
| 10 (f) | What are the usual reasons for involuntary admissions in your country? Risk to other people’s life. | Yes | No |
| 11 | Please list other reasons used for compulsory admission in your country. | Insert answer | |
Requirement for the involvement of an independent medical expert (e.g., psychiatrist not working in the respective hospital) in the compulsory admission procedure.
| Number | Countries | |
|---|---|---|
| Yes | 19 | Armenia; Austria; Belgium; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Croatia; Denmark; Estonia; Finland; France; Georgia; Hungary; Ireland; Israel; Italy; Netherlands; Malta; Norway; Romania; Slovenia |
| No | 19 | Azerbaijan; Belarus; Bulgaria; Czech Republic; Greece; Iceland; Latvia; Lithuania; Moldova; Poland; Portugal; Russia; Serbia; Slovakia; Spain; Sweden; Switzerland; Ukraine; Turkey |
| Variation in same country | 2 | Germany (varies between states); United Kingdom (England, Wales, and Scotland: Yes; Northern Ireland: No) |
Categories of independent medical expert responsible for the compulsory admission process, answers given by 20 countries.
| External medical experts | Number | Countries |
|---|---|---|
| Psychiatrist | 16 | Austria; Belgium; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Croatia; Finland; Georgia; Germany; Hungary; Iceland; Ireland; Israel; Italy; Malta; Netherlands; Romania; UK |
| Court expert in psychiatry | 1 | Slovenia |
| Mental health expert | 1 | Norway (i.e., psychologist) |
| Senior medical doctor | 1 | France |
| Medical doctor | 5 | Belgium; Denmark; Finland; Italy; Norway |
Judge involvement in making the decision about compulsory admission.
| Number | Countries | |
|---|---|---|
| Yes | 33 | Armenia; Austria; Azerbaijan; Belarus; Belgium; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Bulgaria; Croatia; Czech Republic; Estonia; France; Georgia; Germany; Greece; Hungary; Iceland; Israel; Italy; Latvia; Lithuania; Moldova; Netherlands; Poland; Portugal; Romania; Russia; Serbia; Slovakia; Slovenia; Spain; Switzerland; Turkey; Ukraine |
| No | 6 | Denmark; Finland; Ireland; Malta; Norway; Sweden |
| Variable | 1 | United Kingdom (Yes: Scotland; No: England, Wales, and Northern Ireland) |
Involvement of a judge in reviewing the case after a certain period of time.
| Number | Countries | |
|---|---|---|
| Yes | 32 | Austria; Azerbaijan; Belarus; Belgium; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Bulgaria; Croatia; Czech Republic; Estonia; Finland; France; Georgia; Germany; Greece; Hungary; Iceland; Israel; Italy; Lithuania; Moldova; the Netherlands; Norway; Portugal; Romania; Russia; Serbia; Slovakia; Slovenia; Spain; Sweden; Switzerland; Ukraine |
| No | 7 | Armenia; Denmark; Ireland; Latvia; Malta; Poland; Turkey |
| Variable | 1 | United Kingdom (Yes: England, Wales, and Scotland; No: Northern Ireland) |
Time limit on legal decisions on compulsory admission.
| Number | Countries | |
|---|---|---|
| Yes | 38 | Austria; Azerbaijan; Belarus; Belgium; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Bulgaria; Croatia; Czech Republic; Denmark; Estonia; Finland; France; Georgia; Germany; Greece; Hungary; Iceland; Ireland; Israel; Italy; Latvia; Lithuania; Malta; Moldova; the Netherlands; Norway; Poland; Portugal; Romania; Russia; Serbia; Slovakia; Slovenia; Spain; Sweden; Switzerland; Ukraine; United Kingdom |
| No | 1 | Turkey |
Patient’s guaranteed right to a legal counselor (lawyer).
| Number | Countries | |
|---|---|---|
| Yes | 36 | Armenia; Austria; Azerbaijan; Belarus; Belgium; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Bulgaria; Croatia; Czech Republic; Denmark; Estonia; Finland; France; Georgia; Germany; Hungary; Iceland; Ireland; Israel; Italy; Latvia; Lithuania; Moldova; the Netherlands; Norway; Poland; Portugal; Romania; Russia; Serbia; Slovakia; Slovenia; Spain; Sweden; Ukraine; United Kingdom |
| No | 4 | Greece; Malta; Switzerland; Turkey |
NPA survey and literature comparison about guaranteed right to legal counsel and compulsory presence for legal counsel for patient during involuntary admissions.
| Austria | Belgium | Finland | France | Germany | Italy | Norway | Portugal | Spain | Sweden | Switzerland | UK | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient guaranteed right to legal counsel (from NPA survey) | ||||||||||||
| Patient legal counsel compulsory (presence/consultation) (from Sheridan Rains et al. [ | No, but judge has to visit within 4 days | No, but judge has to visit within 10 days | No, but judge has to visit within 10–12 days | Not at the state level |
Figure 1.Involuntary admission reasons divided in two categories .