Ryan Christopher, Callaghan Sascha, Large Matthew
Discipline of Psychiatry and the Centre for Values, Ethics and the Law in Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Australas Psychiatry. 2012 Aug;20(4):283-6. doi: 10.1177/1039856212449668. Epub 2012 Jul 5.
The purpose of this paper is to use the circumstances surrounding the trial of Antony Waterlow to consider the statutory mechanisms for coercive treatment of people with mental illness in Australasia.
The facts in R v Waterlow are examined in the light of a review of Australasia's mental health legislation and recent empirical work on the ability to usefully categorise patients by their likelihood to harm others.
Arguably a major reason for Mr Waterlow's not receiving effective psychiatric treatment prior to the killings was that the doctors who examined him did not think they had reasonable grounds for believing that detention was necessary for the protection of others from serious harm.
The tragedy of the Waterlow matter provides further impetus to a much wider call for the move to capacity-based mental health legislation.
本文旨在利用围绕安东尼·沃特洛审判的情况,探讨澳大拉西亚地区对精神疾病患者进行强制治疗的法定机制。
根据对澳大拉西亚地区心理健康立法的审查以及近期关于根据患者伤害他人可能性进行有效分类能力的实证研究,审视“R诉沃特洛案”中的事实。
可以说,沃特洛先生在杀人前未得到有效精神治疗的一个主要原因是,对他进行检查的医生认为他们没有合理理由相信为保护他人免受严重伤害而进行拘留是必要的。
沃特洛事件的悲剧进一步推动了更广泛的呼吁,即转向基于能力的心理健康立法。