Sunday 27 September 2009

Mental health hospitals are failing in their statutory duties


www.boingboing.net

A new survey suggests that when they are admitted to hospital, many people with mental illness are being denied their rights.

More than 7500 former-patients told the Care Quality Commission (CQC) about their experiences of acute inpatient care. Some were broadly happy, but a significant minority were not.

The CQC has now reported its findings. What many patients were concerned about was simple good practice. A quarter of patients, for example, had not had the talking therapies they wanted, and that NICE says can be helpful; and a similar proportion said they had been less involved in decisions about their care than they wanted to be.

In many cases, however, hospital shortcomings might actually have broken the law:

* Many patients who responded had been detained in hospital, and more than a quarter of them said their rights had not been explained to them in a way they could understand. This is a clear breach of the Mental Health Act (albeit one that has long been suspected to be occurring).
* The position was similar when it came to medication, with another quarter of patients saying the purpose of the medication had not been properly explained and almost a half saying its potential side-effects had been ignored. Some of these patients were detained, of course, and could therefore be forced to have their medication, but the law says this should make no difference.

The CQC’s recent findings are worrying, not least because they suggest that in a large number of cases, hospitals and practitioners are failing to comply with their statutory duties.