Centre for Values, Ethics and the Law in Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2012 Jul;46(7):611-20. doi: 10.1177/0004867412438872. Epub 2012 Feb 21.
To analyse, and explain to Australasian psychiatrists, recent proposed changes to the terms of coercive treatment for mental illness in Tasmania and Victoria and to place the proposals in the context of a broader human rights framework that is likely to impact the future shape of mental health legislation more generally.
The Australian law reform proposals are reviewed against the requirements of numerous human rights instruments, including the recently ratified United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Ethical and legal arguments are made to support the proposed changes and to introduce others, taking into account academic commentary on mental health law and recent empirical work on the ability to usefully categorise patients by their likelihood of harm to self and others.
The Victorian and Tasmanian draft mental health bills propose a new basis for compulsory psychiatric treatment in Australasia. If they become law, coercive psychiatric treatment could only be applied to patients who lack decision-making capacity. The Tasmanian draft bill also sets a new benchmark for timely independent review of compulsory treatment. However both jurisdictions propose to retain an 'additional harm' test which must be satisfied before patients may be treated without consent. This differs from non-psychiatric cases, where if patients are unable to consent to medical treatment for themselves, they will be entitled to receive coercive treatment if it is in their best interests.
The proposed changes under the Tasmanian and Victorian draft mental health bills will ensure that, in line with local and international human rights obligations, only patients who lack decision-making capacity may be coercively treated for mental illness. However the continuing 'additional harm' criteria may breach human rights obligations by imposing a discriminatory threshold for care on patients who are unable to consent to treatment for themselves. This could be avoided by replacing the 'additional harm' test with a 'best interests' test.
分析并向澳大拉西亚精神病医生解释塔斯马尼亚州和维多利亚州最近提出的修改精神疾病强制性治疗条款的建议,并将这些建议置于可能更广泛地影响未来精神卫生立法的人权框架内。
根据包括最近批准的《联合国残疾人权利公约》在内的多项人权文书,审查澳大利亚法律改革建议。提出了道德和法律论据,以支持拟议的修改,并提出了其他修改建议,同时考虑到对精神卫生法的学术评论以及最近关于对自我和他人伤害可能性进行有用分类的患者的实证研究。
维多利亚州和塔斯马尼亚州的精神健康法案草案在澳大拉西亚为强制性精神病治疗提出了新的基础。如果这些法案成为法律,强制性精神病治疗只能适用于缺乏决策能力的患者。塔斯马尼亚州草案还为强制性治疗的及时独立审查设定了新的基准。然而,两个司法管辖区都提议保留“额外伤害”测试,在未经同意治疗患者之前,必须满足该测试。这与非精神病病例不同,在非精神病病例中,如果患者无法自行同意接受治疗,只要符合他们的最佳利益,他们将有权接受强制性治疗。
塔斯马尼亚州和维多利亚州草案精神健康法案中的拟议变更将确保根据当地和国际人权义务,只有缺乏决策能力的患者才能因精神疾病而受到强制性治疗。然而,持续的“额外伤害”标准可能通过对无法自行同意治疗的患者施加歧视性门槛来违反人权义务。可以通过用“最佳利益”测试取代“额外伤害”测试来避免这种情况。