Title: Forensic Rehabilitation: Coercion and Recovery
1Forensic Rehabilitation Coercion and Recovery
- Shawn Mitchell
- Consultant Psychiatrist
- Womens Service, St Andrews Healthcare,
Northampton, UK
2Definitions
- Coercion persuade or restrain (an unwilling
person) by force - Forensic services treating service users who
have offended or have presented high risk
behaviour - Recovery - a spontaneous and natural event in
someone who fulfils diagnostic criteria for a
mental disorder, some who overcome their
problems without intervention - the intended consequence of the skilful use of
the full range of effective treatments - personal recovery which can occur in the
context of continuing symptoms or disabilities - (Ralph and Corrigan 205)
3Forensic/Secure Treatment Environments on the
increase
- England, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain
- Sweden
- Increase in the number of forensic hospital beds
and places in supported housing - Decrease in the number of in-patient beds in
Italy and the Netherlands the increase in
forensic hospital beds and places in supported
housing has been greater than this decrease - Priebe et al 2004
- England from 1996 to 2006
- Decrease of NHS psychiatric beds by 29
- Increase in involuntary admissions by 20 per
annum - Keown et al 2008
4Factors contributing to Coercive Practice
5Non-voluntary treatment
- Detention
- Environmental security
- Relational security
- Restraint
- Seclusion
- Enforced treatment medication
- ECT
- behavioural treatments
6Prevailing Attitudes
- Medical model
- Risk agenda
- Stigma - society
- mental health professionals
- service users
7Institutionalization
- service users - length of stay
- expectations
- consequences of social exclusion
- staff - expectations of service users
- effects of working with challenging group of
service users
8Impaired Decision Making Capacity
- Lack of insight and acceptance can be viewed as
part of the biological process and therefore with
treatment will improve - Substantially more people with schizophrenia lack
capacity than people with depression or angina
(Grisso Appelbaum 1995) - Small subset of service users who have impaired
decision-making capacity, and therefore,
arguably, are unable to make decisions in their
own best interest
9How to ensure minimal use of coercive
practicesandpromote recovery orientated practice
10Principles
- Mental Health Act (2008)
- Purpose
- Least restriction
- Respect
- Participation
- Human Rights Act
- Right to life - Other people also have rights to
life and safety (including staff who are caring
for service users who present serious risks to
others)
11Decision-making about coercive treatment
- Coercion morally unacceptable unless unavoidable
- Coercion counter-therapeutic (Tyler, Winick)
- Major treatment objective should be facilitation
of assumption of health responsibility by
patients themselves - More efficacious the treatment, the greater the
justification for coercion - More serious the sequelae of non-intervention,
the more justified coercive intervention - (Freckleton 2008)
12Statutory Frameworks (England Wales)
- Mental Health Act Tribunal
- Second Opinion (only for
- medication and ECT)
- Independent advocates
- Community Treatment Orders
- Mental Capacity Act Independent Mental Capacity
Advocates - Advance directives
- Healthcare Commission Recording and monitoring
of restraint - Recording and monitoring of seclusion
13Other possible external review mechanisms
- Second opinions
- Ethics committee
- Service user as guardian for service user
lacking capacity, appointment of guardian, who
must be a service user (Munetz Frese 2002) - Capacity Review Panel act as consultant/advocate
to all involved parties as to the
appropriateness of extreme intervention over an
individual service users objection, possibly
consisting of a recovering service user who has
had experience of involuntary treatment, carer
and psychiatrist (Munetz Frese 2002)
14Consequences of not intervening
15Consequences of delay or omission of treatment
- Ongoing distress experienced by the service user
- Ongoing risks to service users and others due to
behaviours related to mental disorder - For service users with a diagnosis of
schizophrenia - increased risk of suicide
- increased risk of victimisation, HIV,
homelessness, violence and incarceration - partial/non treatment can adversely affect
the course and outcome of the illness
16From coercion to recoveryorREADY FOR RECOVERY
17Ready for Recovery
- Using recovery form alcoholism as an example
- The voyage of recovery from alcoholism requires
that the individual be ready to accept the need
for help. - Overcoming stuckness (Young and Ensing 1999)
- At times is co-ercion necessary to overcome
stuckness? - Stages of recovery (as per Recovery Star ten step
ladder of change) - Stuck
- Accepting help
- Believing
- Learning
- Self Reliance
- (MacKeith Burns, Mental Health Providers
Forum)
18Factors necessary to begin recovery
- Hierarchy of factors
- Safety service user
- staff
- Establishing therapeutic relationship
- Many service users who refuse treatment can come
to accept, and hopefully respond to treatment by
careful attention to the therapeutic alliance
(Weiden, Mott Curcio 1995) - Perceptions of coercion have less to do with
legal status (voluntariness) than with
procedural justice which consists of being
allowed a voice (being able to say what you
want) and being treated with respect, concern
and good faith. Service users who experience this
feel less coercion even if they become
involuntary. (Lidz et al, Mac
Arthur Coercion Study, 1995) -
19Factors necessary to begin recovery
- Negotiating and developing shared goals
fostering hope and optimism, and also for need to
change - for change to occur we must first
recognise that we need to change (Wesley Sowers
President of the American Association of
Community Psychiatrist) - Negotiating factors necessary to achieve goal
- Educating service users about recovery though
the development of recovery has been led by
service users it is not innate
20Increasing service users awareness of recovery
- Making service users aware of recovery through
general information - Individualising information about recovery and
making individual service users aware of their
entitlements - Use of peer support
- Use of recovery based outcome measures
21Factors facilitating recovery
- Staff
- Training
- Support challenges of working with service users
with high levels of need and risk - to maintain recovery focus of clinical work
- Monitoring measuring outcome orientation of
clinical environment
22Factor facilitating recovery
- Social inclusion Providing opportunities, within
limitations of secure environments to
experience challenges and different
social roles, sometimes with
encouragement - Therapeutic safety management
23Clinical conundrum
- N 33year old woman
- Convicted of three severe offences, one homicide,
at age of 22, admitted to high secure hospital,
on restriction order - Diagnosis Bipolar affective disorder and mixed
personality disorder - Occasional intermittent episodes of self harm
- Initial amnesia for homicide, but engaged well in
individual and group therapeutic sessions - Progressed through medium and low secure to open
hospital hostel
24Clinical conundrum
- Granted unescorted community leave
- Tried voluntary work, lead to increase in anxiety
and sleep disturbance - Not communicating emotional state to staff
- As a result moved back to open ward and support
for conditional discharge withdrawn - Identified need to review relapse prevention
and coping strategies
25Outcome
- One year later
- Able to allow herself to feel emotions
- Able to talk about index offence
- Improvement in self confidence
- Waiting for discharge
- I thought I was ready for discharge last year,
but have now managed to progress and achieve
things I would never have thought possible
26Conclusion
- Coercion
- Need to be honest that it does occur
- That we have guiding principles influencing
considered decision making when using coercion. - That there are external means of review of
coercive practice - Can be necessary to help a service user to begin
or continue their recovery - Establishing a therapeutic relationship can
minimise the need for coercive practice.