Garakani Amir, Shalenberg Eli, Burstin Samantha C, Weintraub Brendel Rebecca, Appel Jacob M
From the Departments of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine (Dr. Garakani); Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (Drs. Garakani and Appel), and Harvard Medical School (Dr. Brendel); Silver Hill Hospital, New Canaan, CT (Dr. Garakani); Visiting Nurse Service of New York, New York, NY (Dr. Shalenberg); Split Rock Rehabilitation & Health Care Center, Bronx, NY (Ms. Burstin); Center for Law, Brain, and Behavior, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA (Dr. Brendel).
Harv Rev Psychiatry. 2014 Jul-Aug;22(4):241-9. doi: 10.1097/HRP.0000000000000044.
Along with the advances in civil rights protections for psychiatric patients since the 1970s, so-called voluntary inpatient psychiatric admissions have become common. In most U.S. states, however, these voluntary admissions abridge the rights of patients through legal provisions that limit the conditions under which patients can be discharged upon their request. This phenomenon, including variations in the state laws governing requests for discharge from voluntary psychiatric hospitalization, has received little attention in the psychiatry literature. Using Lexis-Nexis, PubMed, and Web of Science, we conducted a review of state laws regarding patients' legal rights to request discharge from voluntary hospitalization. Our hypothesis was that most states would have provisions limiting access to immediate discharge for patients whose psychiatric admission had been voluntary. Our findings from the review indicate that 49 of the 51 jurisdictions (50 states plus the District of Columbia) have provisions about patients requesting discharge from voluntary psychiatric admission. The majority of states employ a 72-hour period in which patients can be held following a request for discharge from hospitalization. As a general rule, after this evaluation period, either the patient must be discharged, or the facility must initiate involuntary commitment proceedings. Given these provisions, we explore the range of clinical admission procedures and whether voluntary admissions are truly voluntary. We also discuss the implications of our analysis for assessing the decisional capacity of patients seeking voluntary psychiatric admission.
自20世纪70年代以来,随着精神科患者民权保护的进步,所谓的自愿住院精神科治疗已变得普遍。然而,在美国大多数州,这些自愿住院治疗通过法律条款侵犯了患者的权利,这些条款限制了患者根据自身请求出院的条件。这种现象,包括各州关于自愿精神科住院治疗出院请求的法律差异,在精神病学文献中很少受到关注。我们利用Lexis-Nexis、PubMed和科学网,对各州关于患者自愿住院治疗出院请求的合法权利的法律进行了审查。我们的假设是,大多数州会有条款限制那些自愿住院治疗的患者立即出院的机会。我们审查的结果表明,51个司法管辖区(50个州加上哥伦比亚特区)中有49个州有关于患者请求从自愿精神科住院治疗中出院的条款。大多数州规定了一个72小时的期限,在此期间,患者提出出院请求后仍可被扣留。一般来说,在这个评估期之后,要么患者必须出院,要么医疗机构必须启动非自愿住院程序。鉴于这些条款,我们探讨了临床入院程序的范围以及自愿住院治疗是否真的是自愿的。我们还讨论了我们的分析对于评估寻求自愿精神科住院治疗的患者的决策能力的意义。