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The problem of community treatment orders

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Zekria Ibrahimi*
Affiliation:
Coombs Library, Uxbridge Road, Southall, Middlesex UB1 3EU, UK. Email: ibrahimizekria@googlemail.com
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Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2010 

According to Reference AllenAllen (2009), the care programme approach (CPA) is a bureaucratic device, not a legal necessity, which has in effect been downgraded since October 2008. The alternative is Section 47 under the National Health Service and Community Care Act 1990.

What is less clear is how the CPA or Section 47 would link up with another new instrument of the Mental Health Act 1983 (as amended in 2007), community treatment orders (CTOs), which the author does not mention.

Someone on a CTO would presumably be diagnosed as extremely ill, and would be more in need of Section 47 provisions. It would be shocking if placement on a CTO, which restricts the freedom of a patient so much, did not guarantee greater access to resources even though they may be scarce (for example, direct payments and housing).

Illumination through legal precedent, case law and statute is not enough. How community care and community treatment orders function (or do not function) cannot be understood without an evidence base and randomised controlled trials. For example, maybe care within the family is not as good as care from mental health professionals.

Although CTOs are now law, they have a poor evidence base (Reference Jethwa and GalappathieJethwa 2008). Some psychiatrists believe that they are not a magic cure for the revolving door syndrome (Reference Lawton-Smith, Dawson and BurnsLawton-Smith 2008). The unexpectedly large numbers put onto community treatment orders (Rugkåska 2009) call for another article in Advances, on how CTOs link up with community care law revolving round Section 47.

References

Allen, D (2009) Understanding community care law in England and Wales. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment 15: 428–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jethwa, K, Galappathie, N (2008) Community treatment orders. BMJ 337: a613.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lawton-Smith, S, Dawson, J, Burns, T (2008) Community treatment orders are not a good thing. British Journal of Psychiatry 193: 96100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rugkåsa, J, Burns, T (2009) Community treatment orders. Psychiatry 8: 493–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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