Hassan Tariq, Nizami Asad Tamizuddin, Hirji Sarah
Department of Psychiatry, Division of Forensic Psychiatry, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Institute of Psychiatry, WHO Collaborating Centre for Mental Health, Rawalpindi Medical College, Rawalpindi, Pakistan.
Int J Law Psychiatry. 2015 Jul-Aug;41:95-104. doi: 10.1016/j.ijlp.2015.05.001. Epub 2015 May 27.
This article reviews existing forensic psychiatric services in Pakistan highlighting the role played by the judicial and the medical fraternity in managing the legal and forensic issues of the population of patients with mental illnesses. Until 2001, all legal and forensic issues were dealt with the mental health legislation of 1912, the Lunacy Act of 1912. This was inherited from the British rulers in the Sub-Continent at the time. The Mental Health Ordinance of 2001 could not sustain following the 18th constitutional amendment in 2010, whereby psychiatric healthcare was devolved to the provinces from the previous federal authority. The article also highlights the difficulties and the barriers in implementation of the forensic psychiatric services in Pakistan at various levels within the healthcare system. This article also delves into the current framework of training in forensic psychiatry for postgraduates as well as the assessments and management schedules for the mentally ill offenders at tertiary care institutions in Pakistan.
本文回顾了巴基斯坦现有的法医精神病学服务,强调了司法界和医学界在处理精神病患者群体的法律和法医问题中所发挥的作用。直到2001年,所有法律和法医问题都依据1912年的《精神健康法》(即1912年的《疯人法》)来处理。这是当时从次大陆的英国统治者那里继承而来的。2001年的《精神健康条例》在2010年第18次宪法修正案后无法继续实施,据此,精神病医疗保健从前联邦当局下放到了各省。本文还强调了巴基斯坦医疗系统各级在实施法医精神病学服务方面的困难和障碍。本文还深入探讨了巴基斯坦研究生法医精神病学培训的当前框架,以及三级医疗机构中对精神病罪犯的评估和管理方案。