Clinical scenario
Mr X is a 52-year-old man with alcohol-related brain damage (ARBD) and active alcohol dependence. He is brought to the acute hospital in an unkempt, disoriented and inattentive state and is medically admitted and treated with chlordiazepoxide and high-dose parenteral thiamine. Mr X is known to be a frequent hospital attender with alcohol withdrawals and complications of alcoholic liver disease. He lives alone in a council flat, and there are increasing complaints from neighbours that the property is in a neglected state, with empty bottles, clutter and vermin. Prior to previous hospital discharges, Mr X agreed to a care package, but this plan consistently broke down owing to his failure to admit carers into his home. On this occasion, the multidisciplinary team (MDT) view is that discharge to residential care that restricts access to alcohol should be considered. Following completion of Mr X's alcohol detoxification, the team explains to him the serious medical and social complications of his alcohol use, the importance of abstaining from alcohol and the MDT recommendation. However, Mr X declines to consider a care home and insists that he wishes to return home and to continue drinking ‘in moderation’. Considering this a complex case, the social worker requests a liaison psychiatry opinion on whether Mr X has capacity to make decisions about his care and residence on discharge.
Key questions
• How can ARBD and alcohol dependence affect decision-making ability?
• How should you approach assessment of capacity to consent to care and residence in this case?
• What guidance do clinical studies, legal cases and the ethics literature provide?
Introduction
Liaison psychiatrists, often called to help with capacity assessments in the general hospital, have identified that assessments can be challenging in patients with ARBD who refuse care. In a recent qualitative interview study, they noted that good verbal skills in these individuals can hide significant cognitive and functional impairment, and executive dysfunction can be associated with a lack of ‘follow through’ on care plans made with healthcare professionals.Reference Kane, Ruck Keene, Owen and Kim1 Previous literature has raised further clinical and ethical considerations. For example, when is the right time to carry out a capacity assessment? Is coercive intervention justified when addiction is causing harm?Reference Hazelton, Sterns and Chisholm2,Reference Perkins, Hopkins, Svanberg, Withall, Draper and Bowden3 This article gives an overview of literature and case law to guide clinicians approaching these assessments. We hope that the insights provided might also be applied to other complex capacity situations. The legal framework discussed is the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA) of England and Wales; the MCA defines incapacity (which must be caused by an impairment of mind or brain) as the inability to understand, retain, use or weigh relevant information, or to communicate the decision.
Review of the literature
Characteristics of ARBD
Alcohol-related brain damage is an umbrella term for chronic neuropsychological disorders caused by direct and indirect effects of alcohol on the brain,Reference Rao and Topiwala4 and usually understood to include both alcohol-related dementia and Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome.Reference Jauhar and Smith5 Proposed pathophysiological mechanisms include the direct neurotoxicity of ethanol and its metabolite acetaldehyde, thiamine deficiency and vulnerability to hepatic encephalopathy, traumatic brain injury and cardiovascular risks.Reference Rao and Topiwala4,Reference Rehm, Hasan, Black, Shield and Schwarzinger6 Structural and functional brain changes in ARBD affect the frontal lobes (prefrontal cortex), limbic system (hippocampus, hypothalamus and mamillary bodies) and cerebellum.Reference Rao and Topiwala4,Reference Bernardin, Maheut-Bosser and Paille7 Typical cognitive deficits include executive dysfunction, loss of episodic memory (prominent anterograde amnesia in Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome) and visuospatial deficits, with relative sparing of language in comparison with Alzheimer's disease.Reference Ridley, Draper and Withall8 In contrast to other dementias, people with alcohol-related dementia are more likely to be younger, male, socially isolated and have significant comorbidity.Reference Ridley, Draper and Withall8 There is limited evidence for pharmacological treatment of ARBDReference Ridley, Draper and Withall8–Reference Rustembegović, Kundurović, Sapcanin and Sofic10 but acute treatment of suspected Wernicke's encephalopathy with high-dose parental thiamine is advised to prevent chronic deficits.Reference Rao and Topiwala4 Stability or partial reversibility of clinical deficits and neuroradiological changes can be achieved with abstinence from alcohol.Reference Rao and Topiwala4,Reference Ridley, Draper and Withall8 However, people with ARBD are less likely to move to abstinence than peers with alcohol dependence and intact cognition.Reference Rao11
Alcohol and decision-making
The ‘competing neural systems account’ models alcohol dependence (and other addictions) as an imbalance between impulsive and reflective cognitive systems, leading to dysfunctional decision-making in relation to alcohol use. The overactive impulsive system involves strong associative memory between alcohol-related cues and ‘automatic’ behaviour (mobilising the dopaminergic system of the amygdala–striatal circuit), while the underactive reflective system involves executive functions (various regions of the frontal lobe and striatum) that become less able to regulate the impulsive system to achieve adapted behaviour.Reference Bernardin, Maheut-Bosser and Paille7,Reference Bechara, Noel, Crone, Wiers and Stacy12–Reference Bickel, Miller, Yi, Kowal, Lindquist and Pitcock14 It has been suggested that greater impairment of executive functions (working memory and inhibition capacity) in ARBD increasingly predisposes to drinking behaviour dictated by the impulsive system.Reference Bernardin, Maheut-Bosser and Paille7 Beyond decision-making about drinking, studies evidence wider decision-making impairments in individuals with alcohol and other addictions. These include exaggerated delay discounting: compared with controls, dependent individuals significantly prefer less substantial, more immediate rewards over more substantial, delayed rewards.Reference Bickel, Miller, Yi, Kowal, Lindquist and Pitcock14 Risk valuation is also impaired: individuals with alcohol dependence tend to make riskier decisionsReference Brevers, Bechara, Cleeremans, Kornreich, Verbanck and Noël15–Reference Kovács, Richman, Janka, Maraz and Andó18 as tested by the Iowa Gambling Task.Reference Bechara, Damasio, Damasio and Anderson19 Even those now abstinent from alcohol continue to perform more poorly than controls,Reference Körner, Schmidt and Soyka16 suggesting persistent decision-making deficits.
Clinical studies of decision-making capacity
Little is known about how these deficits correlate with real-world decision-making and decisional capacity. To date, no study has systematically investigated capacity for personal care decisions in individuals with ARBD or alcohol dependence. Findings from other patient groups and other decisional capacities may be relevant. A descriptive study found that liaison psychiatrists often determine patients with substance use disorders to lack capacity for healthcare decisions.Reference Boettger, Bergman, Jenewein and Boettger20 Several studies have found people with Alzheimer's disease more likely to lack capacity for various decisions than unaffected peers, although with significant heterogeneity in those with mild to moderate cognitive impairment. Studies of individuals with traumatic brain injury showed that impaired capacity for treatment and financial decisions is prevalent and strongly correlated with severity of the injury.Reference Triebel, Martin, Novack, Dreer, Turner and Pritchard21,Reference Dreer, DeVivo, Novack and Marson22 In both Alzheimer's and traumatic brain injury groups, memory and executive function deficits were predictive of decisional impairment.Reference Kim, Karlawish and Caine23–Reference Dreer, DeVivo, Novack, Krzywanski and Marson26 A qualitative study has suggested that failure to ‘use or weigh’ in brain-injured patients with frontal lobe syndrome may relate to difficulty integrating an abstract awareness of their deficits into real-world decision-making.Reference Owen, Freyenhagen, Martin and David27 In an interview study, liaison psychiatrists recommended that clinicians assessing capacity in patients with ARBD should carry out repeat assessments, incorporating evidence of the patient's real-world decision-making.Reference Kane, Ruck Keene, Owen and Kim1
Relevant case-law
Although studies of incapacity in different clinical groups can be helpful in guiding one's approach to assessment,28 only a functional capacity assessment can determine an individual's capacity to take a specific decision at a specific time. The highest arbiter of capacity assessments under the MCA is the Court of Protection (CoP), which offers a useful data-set of published judicial decisions.Reference Ruck Keene, Kane, Kim and Owen29 To date, only two published judgments have expressly considered capacity in individuals with ARBD (Table 1). In both cases (perhaps surprisingly), the individual was found to have capacity for care and residence decisions. Clinical factors discussed included the individual's memory and planning abilities, insight into his (in)ability to control his drinking, ability to mask his cognitive deficits, and evidence of reversal of cognitive impairment with abstinence. Legal factors such as time and decision specificity were discussed; in one case, the judge cautioned that evidence about the individual's capacity to make decisions about alcohol was only relevant when tied directly to the ‘operational’ decision (capacity for care/residence).
Interestingly, neither judgment gave much detail on the individual's cognitive impairment. This contrasts with other CoP judgments examining capacity in individuals with mixed dementias caused in part by alcohol use. For example, in D v R & S [2010] EWCOP 2405, the case of a man with dementia ‘most probably caused by alcohol use and cerebrovascular disease’, there was extensive reference to structured psychological measurement, including the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) and specific frontal lobe tests.Reference McWilliams, Fleming, David and Owen30 The judge concluded that the individual's memory and frontal deficits caused an inability to understand and weigh relevant information.
In London Borough of Tower Hamlets v PB (Table 1) the judge expressed concern lest ‘most addicts’ be considered incapacitous. More broadly, two other CoP judgments considered capacity in the context of alcohol dependence and so are worth mentioning. In An NHS Foundation Trust v Ms X [2014] EWCOP 35, the experts contrasted a young woman's capacity to decide about alcohol use with her lack of capacity regarding treatment of her anorexia:Reference Craigie and Davies31 ‘ … she appeared to be making choices about when to drink, when to drink more, and when to drink less’. In RB v Brighton and Hove CC [2014] EWCA Civ 561, the court distinguished between a man's decision-making ability before and after a traumatic brain injury affecting his frontal lobe; he had a prior history of alcohol dependence, criminality and homelessness. Expert evidence argued that an ‘ordinary alcoholic [ … ] does not have the frontal lobe damage which means that a person such as RB works on impulse [ … ] Alcoholics can weigh up their decisions’.
Ethical debates on capacity in alcohol dependence
Ethical debates on capacity in substance use disorders frequently focus on whether dependent individuals have capacity to decide about use of their addictive agent and treatment for their addiction. Responding to the practice of prescribing heroin to people with heroin use disorder in research trials, Charland argues that people with addiction – by nature of their disease – have compromised ability to ‘weigh risks and benefits’ associated with heroin use and thus are incompetent to consent to its prescription. Invoking studies of altered neurocircuitry in people with addiction, he describes the transformative power of addiction-related ‘compulsion’. Under duress of such compulsion, he argues, people with addiction, regardless of their behavioural state, approach decisions with a fundamentally changed set of ‘pathological values’ that compromises capacity.Reference Charland, Poland and Graham32 Craigie & Davies compare ‘impaired control’ in alcohol dependence with that in anorexia nervosa, pointing out that anorexia is often cited to impair capacity regarding treatment.Reference Craigie and Davies31 In contrast, Foddy & Savulescu reject the pathologised ‘disease view’ of addictive behaviour as a ‘fiction of affliction’. They argue that people with addictions remain fully autonomous, as addictive desires are essentially normal (if especially strong) desires towards pleasure, and only ‘irresistible’ forces render choices non-autonomous.Reference Foddy and Savulescu33 Importantly, these ethical arguments do not, without additional reasoning, apply to the question of whether addiction impairs capacity to make other decisions, such as care or residence. However, where a care plan or residence environment restricts or forbids access to alcohol, they may become relevant. Further, a recent paper argues that executive dysfunction in people with opioid use disorder who refuse medical care after overdose may cause these individuals to be ‘unmoved’ by the risks of leaving hospital and may impair their capacity for this decision.Reference Marshall, Derse, Weiner and Joseph34
Reflections and considerations
Mr X has ARBD and alcohol dependence, with evidence of severe self-neglect and a history of refusing home supports that he has previously agreed to. Assessment of his capacity to consent to admission to a care home, where his access to alcohol is likely to be restricted, raises clinical, legal and ethical issues.
Although studies evidence brain changes and functional decision-making impairments in alcohol and other addictions, the CoP cases show that there is strong resistance in the courts to considering that an ‘ordinary alcoholic’ might lack capacity. The ethics literature is divided, but there is likely to be a pragmatic element at play here. Considering that persons with alcohol dependence may lack capacity to make decisions about alcohol raises the policy question of whether restrictive measures should be initiated in their best interests to promote abstinence. However, enabling recovery from addiction seems more likely to be achieved by empowering rather than diminishing a person's sense of agency.Reference Pickard35,Reference Bandura, Freeman and Lightsey36 There is little evidence for efficacy of coercive treatment for dependence syndromes outside the criminal justice systemReference Broadstock, Brinson and Weston37 and, with limited exceptions,38,39 there is little appetite for this practice worldwide. Whether or not directly reflecting this evidence, deprivation of liberty for substance dependence is not legally sanctioned under the MCA or the Mental Health Act 1983 (England and Wales).
Nonetheless, individuals with ARBD, such as Mr X, can have severe cognitive impairment and impaired functioning, which mirrors other dementia syndromes. Social isolation, poor engagement and relatively preserved verbal abilities allowing the masking of impairment might all contribute to under-recognition of ARBD and its consequences for decision-making capacity. Cognitively, Mr X may have deficits in episodic memory that prevent his recall of the neglected condition of his home or of events following previous hospital discharges. He may have executive dysfunction impairing his ability to reason about risks, to integrate abstract knowledge of his care needs into decision-making or to follow through on agreed care plans. Further, there is a complex interplay between the effects of ARBD and alcohol dependence on decision-making about drinking, and the impulsivity and disinhibition characteristic of executive dysfunction in ARBD is likely to interact with and amplify reinforcement-driven addictive behaviour. This may influence Mr X's ability to decide to stay in residential environments restricting his access to alcohol.
As clinicians confronted with alcohol-related presentations like that of Mr X, it is always worthwhile to reflect on the role of negative countertransference,Reference Nassif40 wider stigma and societal value judgements on who is ‘to blame’ and who ‘deserves treatment’.Reference Craigie and Davies31 Finally, it is worth noting that competing ethical and legal duties are at play in these complex cases. There is a fallacy in thinking solely about capacity (and, within that, capacity to make decisions about alcohol and care), as opposed to locating discussion within the scope of wider obligations to safeguard vulnerable persons,Reference Preston-Shoot and Ward41 for instance under legislation giving effect to the European Convention on Human Rights, as well as duties under the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
Practical management
(1) Delay the capacity assessment until Mr X's acute medical problems are treated. Ensure that an adequate dose and duration of chlordiazepoxide has been given to treat alcohol withdrawal fully. Assess for features of Wernicke's encephalopathy (note that the full triad of oculomotor disturbance, ataxia and altered mental state is present in only 23% of cases) and if it is suspected, continue treatment with high-dose parenteral thiamine until no further clinical improvement is noted.Reference Galvin, Bråthen, Ivashynka, Hillbom, Tanasescu and Leone42 Other causes of delirium, such as hepatic encephalopathy, brain injury or infection, should be identified and treated appropriately. Screen for and treat comorbid mental health conditions, including mood or psychotic disorders.
(2) Carry out a thorough cognitive assessment to help clarify the clinical picture and guide your approach to the capacity assessment. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination III (ACE-III) are superior to the MMSE as they have a higher sensitivity for frontal impairment. Consider a bedside frontal lobe battery or referral to neuropsychology for more detailed testing of executive function. Be mindful that relatively preserved language skills may present a superficial but false picture of intact cognition.
(3) Gather collateral information and build up a longitudinal picture of Mr X's day-to-day functioning at home and on the ward. Involve multidisciplinary colleagues, including occupational therapist assessments, social care reports and nursing observations. This is all ‘relevant information’ that should be put to Mr X at interview.
(4) Consider the specific capacity decision at hand. Guidance is available on relevant information that must be provided in assessments of capacity to consent to care and residence.43 This includes the areas Mr X needs support with, what would happen without support, and the sort of care he would receive in a particular placement (e.g. whether alcohol would be restricted).
(5) Explore Mr X's own beliefs and values and how he might best be engaged and supported in his decision-making.Reference Kane, Ruck Keene, Owen and Kim1 Does he have family, friends or a trusted key worker who might help him to take information on board? Would he consider visiting a care home to get a concrete sense of what life might be like there?
(6) Assess Mr X's capacity to make the decision using the MCA criteria, namely his ability to understand, retain and use or weigh relevant information, and to communicate his decision.44 Can he grasp the MDT's concerns about his cognition and care needs? Can he retain information about relevant past events for sufficient time to make a decision? Can he appreciate potential risks and weigh these in the balance? Rather than just ‘talk the talk’, can he use information at the time the decision needs to be made?45
(7) Be mindful of the potential for reversibility of cognitive impairment and the need to schedule repeat capacity assessment(s) for Mr X after an appropriate interval.
(8) Finally, although not the focus of this article, it is important to remember that even if Mr X lacks capacity regarding care decisions, the question of his best interests requires separate consideration under the MCA.
Conclusions
Assessing capacity in people with ARBD can be clinically and ethically complex. Although alcohol dependence alone is generally not considered sufficient to impair capacity, it adds complexity in ARBD cases. Awareness of possible decision-making impairments and how these might interact with the decision at hand can provide helpful context in approaching individual capacity assessments for people with ARBD. The timing of the assessment is particularly important, given potential acuity and reversibility in this clinical presentation. Collateral information and multidisciplinary assessment can be key in establishing the relevant information that the individual must understand, retain, use and weigh. In terms of further research, clinical studies of capacity in people with ARBD (including those with active alcohol dependence) would be useful; this work could help clinicians approaching capacity assessments and developing decision-making supports.
About the authors
Nuala B. Kane is a consultant general adult psychiatrist at Dublin Southeast Mental Health Service, Health Service Executive, Dublin, Ireland. Norella Broderick is a specialist registrar at Dublin Southeast Mental Health Service, Health Service Executive, Dublin, Ireland. Emily Rao is a medical student at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine, La Jolla, California, USA. Alex Ruck Keene is a barrister and Visiting Professor at the Dickson Poon School of Law, King's College London, London, UK. Rahul Tony Rao is a consultant old age psychiatrist and Visiting Clinical Research Fellow at the Institute of Psychiatry Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
Data availability
Data availability is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analysed in this study.
Author contributions
N.B.K., A.R.K. and R.T.R. conceptualised the article. N.B.K. wrote the original draft with support from N.B. and E.R. All authors made written contributions and agreed the final content.
Funding
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Declaration of interest
None.
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