Leaf P
Hosp Community Psychiatry. 1977 May;28(5):351-6. doi: 10.1176/ps.28.5.351.
In 1971 U.S. District Judge Frank M. Johnson, Jr., ruled that patients involuntarily committed to Alabama mental institutions have a constitutional right to treatment. The following year he issued a court order containing 35 minimum constitutional standards for adequate treatment of the mentally ill and appointed human rights committees at the institutions to oversee their implementation. Focusing primarily on Bryce Hospital in Tuscaloosa, the author examines the extent to which compliance with the standards has been achieved, problems that have arisen in implementing the standards, and issues that still must be dealt with. He briefly discusses changes in the state's mental health system that preceded the filing of the case, and he emphasizes that those changes may have contributed significantly to the improvements that have occurred in mental health care in Alabama after Wyatt.
1971年,美国地方法院法官小弗兰克·M·约翰逊裁定,非自愿被关押在阿拉巴马州精神病院的患者享有接受治疗的宪法权利。次年,他发布了一项法院命令,其中包含35项关于充分治疗精神病患者的最低宪法标准,并在这些机构中任命了人权委员会来监督标准的执行情况。作者主要以塔斯卡卢萨的布莱斯医院为重点,考察了在多大程度上实现了对这些标准的遵守、执行标准过程中出现的问题以及仍需处理的问题。他简要讨论了在该案件提起之前该州心理健康系统的变化,并强调这些变化可能对怀亚特案之后阿拉巴马州心理健康护理方面出现的改善做出了重大贡献。