Literature DB >> 7652098

From conversion to coercion: the police role in medication compliance.

A J Meehan1.   

Abstract

This paper examines the role of the police in supporting community based mental health services for the chronically mentally ill in a mid-sized midwestern city. Cooperation between the police and mental health system, as reflected in training and procedural agreements for emergency evaluations and hospitalization, achieves the conversion of the police to a medical model view of mental illness which stresses the importance and effectiveness of medication compliance so that the police will act upon this belief in their handling of the mentally ill. However, police recognition of the limits of the medical model and organizational change impacts upon cooperative police practices. Police experience conflict over the assumed therapeutic goals of community treatment and the important gatekeeping function community mental health systems perform under deinstitutionalization. Erosion of the police belief in the effectiveness of community mental health, and the resulting change in practices, may provide an important, yet partial, counterbalance to the control exerted by the medical model. The availability of police authority to assure compliance, or in some cases to reinforce the consequences of non-compliance with medication, raises questions about police-mental health relationships that are too cooperative.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7652098     DOI: 10.1007/bf02238862

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatr Q        ISSN: 0033-2720


  8 in total

1.  The social work practitioner and antipsychotic medications.

Authors:  U C Gerhart; A D Brooks
Journal:  Soc Work       Date:  1983 Nov-Dec

2.  Co-occurring disorders among mentally ill jail detainees. Implications for public policy.

Authors:  K M Abram; L A Teplin
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  1991-10

Review 3.  Community care of the seriously mentally ill: continuing problems and current issues.

Authors:  U Aviram
Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  1990-02

4.  The chronic mentally ill and the criminal justice system: when to call the police.

Authors:  L I Stein; R J Diamond
Journal:  Hosp Community Psychiatry       Date:  1985-03

5.  Criminalizing mental disorder. The comparative arrest rate of the mentally ill.

Authors:  L A Teplin
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  1984-07

6.  The alchemy of mental health policy: homelessness and the fourth cycle of reform.

Authors:  H H Goldman; J P Morrissey
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1985-07       Impact factor: 9.308

7.  Deinstitutionalization and the homeless mentally ill.

Authors:  H R Lamb
Journal:  Hosp Community Psychiatry       Date:  1984-09

8.  Enhancing medication use in schizophrenic patients.

Authors:  R J Diamond
Journal:  J Clin Psychiatry       Date:  1983-06       Impact factor: 4.384

  8 in total
  1 in total

Review 1.  Interagency collaboration models for people with mental ill health in contact with the police: a systematic scoping review.

Authors:  Adwoa Parker; Arabella Scantlebury; Alison Booth; Jillian Catherine MacBryde; William J Scott; Kath Wright; Catriona McDaid
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2018-03-27       Impact factor: 2.692

  1 in total

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