Book contents
- A Clinician’s Brief Guide to Dementia and the Law
- A Clinician’s Brief Guide to Dementia and the Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Common Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Dementia
- Chapter 2 Dementia
- Chapter 3 Dementia
- Chapter 4 The Mental Capacity Act 2005
- Chapter 5 The Mental Health Act 1983
- Chapter 6 The Care Act 2014
- Chapter 7 Assessment of Capacity
- Chapter 8 The Diagnosis of Dementia
- Chapter 9 Care and Treatment Issues and the Law
- Chapter 10 Deprivation of Liberty
- Chapter 11 Discharge from Hospital
- Chapter 12 Abuse and Safeguarding
- Chapter 13 The Courts and Tribunals
- Chapter 14 The Interface between Dementia and the Criminal Justice System
- Book part
- References
- Index
Chapter 5 - The Mental Health Act 1983
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 July 2023
- A Clinician’s Brief Guide to Dementia and the Law
- A Clinician’s Brief Guide to Dementia and the Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Common Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Dementia
- Chapter 2 Dementia
- Chapter 3 Dementia
- Chapter 4 The Mental Capacity Act 2005
- Chapter 5 The Mental Health Act 1983
- Chapter 6 The Care Act 2014
- Chapter 7 Assessment of Capacity
- Chapter 8 The Diagnosis of Dementia
- Chapter 9 Care and Treatment Issues and the Law
- Chapter 10 Deprivation of Liberty
- Chapter 11 Discharge from Hospital
- Chapter 12 Abuse and Safeguarding
- Chapter 13 The Courts and Tribunals
- Chapter 14 The Interface between Dementia and the Criminal Justice System
- Book part
- References
- Index
Summary
In England, the Care Quality Commission is responsible for monitoring the way the MHA is used and protecting the interests of patients under the Act. The Commission have observed that between 2005–06 and 2015–16, the reported number of uses of the MHA increased by 40%. They proposed a number of factors that influenced the rates of detention, including the increase in population size and in sections of the population ‘at risk’ of detention, especially older people with dementia. Furthermore, there has been a striking change in policy and practice as a result of the Supreme Court judgment in P and Q and P in Cheshire West and how criteria for detention are now applied to people with dementia. The effect of this has meant that most patients with dementia and who lack the capacity to consent to admission to psychiatric in-patient care are now detained under the MHA. We will therefore give a brief overview of the MHA, especially as it relates to dementia, and other practical applications will be dealt with in more detail in the chapters to follow.
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- A Clinician's Brief Guide to Dementia and the Law , pp. 35 - 45Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023