Title: John Stuart Mill and the
1John Stuart Mill and the
Compulsory Treatment of the
Mentally Ill
Vaughan Bell vaughan_at_backspace.org
2Premise
- Mill exempts certain people from his Liberty
Principle. - e.g. those with mental illness.
- The diagnosis of certain forms of mental illness
relies on incoherent or weak diagnostic criteria. - Considering this, I will examine whether
including persons with mental illness in the
Liberty Principle makes for a more consistent
approach.
3Introduction
- JSM, the Liberty Principle, and the exception of
the mental illness. - Developments in psychiatry and their implication
for Mills exception - Delusions.
- The continuum model of psychosis.
- Insight and health decisions.
- Conclusions
4John Stuart Mill
- 1806-1873
- Suffered his own mental crisis at the age of
19. - Probably a severe depressive episode.
- Wrote extensively on many topics, although I will
focus on the arguments in On Liberty.
- Frequently quoted by anti-psychiatry movement,
for example Thomas Szasz (1971), who argues that
any compulsory treatment is incompatible with a
free society.
5The Liberty Principle
- John Stuart Mill states a very simple principle
of when a society may intervene into a persons
affairs - That the only purpose for which power can be
rightfully exercised over any member of a
civilised community, against his will, is to
prevent harm from others. His own good, either
physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant
6Exceptions
- However, he makes exceptions to his principle for
those with mental illness - ...this doctrine is meant to apply only to human
beings in the maturity of their faculties - and also
- unless he is a child, or delirious, or in some
state of excitement or absorption incompatible
with the full use of the reflecting faculty - I am going to call people for whom the Liberty
Principle is not intended to apply LP Exempt.
7Internal Ambiguities
- Currently, treatment of severe mental illness may
involve compulsory treatment. - At first this seems compatible with Mill. Mental
illness makes you LP exempt, so detention is not
a violation to your right to liberty. - However, there are further ambiguities present.
- e.g. personal responsibility for mental health
- Each is the proper guardian of his own health,
whether bodily, or mental or spiritual. Mankind
are greater gainers by suffering each other to
live as seems good to themselves, than by
compelling each to live as seems good to the
rest.
8Internal Ambiguities
- And when applied to compulsory detention, serious
question begging (cart before horse) - Those who are still in a state to require being
taken care of by others, must be protected
against their own actions as well as against
external injury.
9General Rule
- Despite the internal ambiguities, we can extract
a general rule from On Liberty. - We can surmise that for Mill, forceful coercion
may only be used - To prevent harm to other members of society.
- When a person is LP exempt.
10Influence of Psychiatry
Developments in psychiatry influence who is, and
who isnt LP exempt Application of the Liberty
Principle relies on individuals having
maturity and full use of faculties, an
exception to which relies on psychiatric
assessment, which relies on current
understanding of psychopathology.
11Delusions
- Psychiatry makes a distinction between normal
beliefs and those that can be diagnosed as
delusional. - The DSM-IV describes a delusion thus
- A false belief based on incorrect inference
about external reality that is firmly sustained
despite what almost everybody else believes and
despite what constitutes incontrovertible and
obvious proof or evidence to the contrary. - According to the Liberty Principle, we have no
right to suppress the expression of normal
beliefs. - But a diagnosis of a belief as delusional may
make you, or the belief, LP exempt.
12Delusions Counter examples
- However, the DSM criteria are somewhat shaky
- firmly sustained
- Myin-Germeys (2001) found that intensity of
delusions may change during the day. - incorrect inference about external reality
- Spitzer (1990) has noted that this statement may
be - not applicable (Satan listens to my thoughts).
- not provable (I am being bugged by the CIA)
- not true ! (e.g. delusional jealousy)
13Delusions Counter examples
- despite what constitutes incontrovertible and
obvious proof or evidence to the contrary - Thomas Kuhn (1962) demonstrated that scientists
may continue to hold strong beliefs despite
overwhelming contradictory evidence. - As can be seen, the psychiatric criteria which
would render a belief LP exempt is incoherent.
14Justification for Detention
- Since the normal / pathological distinction is
not adequate, when might detention be justified ? - Clear cut
- Mill makes clear that all thought is
self-regarding, so thought (or belief) itself is
no basis for detention. - If a belief is acted on in a way that harms
others, compulsory detention can be justified. - Not so clear cut
- Mill argues that expression of belief cannot be
be treated as self-regarding if it has at least
a probable connexion to a harmful act.
15Connection to Risk
- In psychiatry, this relies on a forensic
assessment of risk. - If a risk assessment is 95 accurate and 100 out
of 10,000 (0.01) will cause a harmful act - 95 harmful people will be detained
- 5 will commit their act.
- 495 harmless people will be detained.
- On utilitarian LP grounds, the right to be free
from unjust detention would seem to outweigh the
good done by protecting the public. - In this case Mills principle is not consistent.
16Expressing Beliefs
- Beliefs labelled as delusions are often intensely
held, pre-occupying the believer, sometimes
leading to unusual or bizarre behaviour. - Mill considers the idea that free expression
should require fair and temperate discussion, but
rejects it as too restrictive. - But, he does say that the liberty of an
individual must be thus far limited must not
make himself a nuisance to other people. - In this case, a delusion is treated like any
other belief, where expression, not content, is
used to assess LP exempt status.
17Delusions and Mill
- If we are to take the definition of a delusion
(and hence LP exempt status) as incoherent... - Justified detention in the case of a person
presenting with a delusion, according to Mill
depends on - A dangerous act.
- An expression of a belief with a probable
connection to a dangerous act. - The expression of a belief which becomes a
nuisance to others. - This seems to be no less ambiguous and value
laden than the psychiatric route.
18Psychosis
- Psychosis is a mental state in which the
perception of reality is distorted, common
phenomena are - Hallucinations (e.g. voices, images, smells,
tactile sensations) - Delusions (e.g. persecutory, grandiose,
religious, erotomanic) - Formal thought disorder (e.g. flight of ideas,
derailment, clanging) - In psychiatry, the traditional view is that there
is a qualitative difference between a psychotic
and non-psychotic state.
19Continuum Model
- More recently it has been shown that such
experiences are common throughout the population
and the difference may be a quantitative one. - 20.9 GP patients reported one or more psychotic
symptoms (Olfson et al, 2002) - 38.7 reported hallucinatory experiences (Ohayon,
2000) - Delusions questionnaire 10 of general
population scored above the mean of the deluded
inpatient group (Peters et al, 1999)
20Religion and the Continuum
- Peters et al (1999) showed that members of New
Religious Movements may endorse almost as many
anomalous experiences and beliefs as clinically
deluded inpatients. - However, there is no suggestion that people in
these groups are more mentally ill then the
general population. - So, in this case, the criteria which would render
a person LP exempt are inconsistent.
21Individuality and Psychosis
- It seems that people who have more psychotic
experience are simply statistically anomalous and
hence more likely to stand out as individuals. - Indeed, Szasz (1962) makes a similar argument and
argues that mental illness is a construct to
control the anomalous. - Mill himself specifically noted the abuse of
psychiatry to oppress those who do not conform.
22Mill on Abuse of Psychiatry
To indulge somewhat, I repeat for whoever allow
themselves much of that indulgence of
non-conformity, incur the risk of something
worse than disparaging speeches they are in
peril of a commission de lunatico
All of the minute details of his daily life are
pried into, and whatever is found is laid before
the jury as evidence of insanity
In former days, when it was proposed to burn
atheists, charitable people used to suggest
putting them in a madhouse instead it would be
nothing surprising now-a-days were we to see this
done, and the doers applauding themselves,
because, instead of persecuting for religion,
they had adopted so humane and Christian a mode
of treating these unfortunates
23Justification for Coercion
- With regarding to self-regarding conduct (inc.
self injurous conduct), Mill argues society has
no legitimate authority. - Persons ought to use firmness and self-control
to tame negative other-regarding impulses. - And that coercion is only justified if a person
cannot do so. - In this case, Mill is more consistent than a
psychiatric assessment of LP exempt status. - Although, self-control requires insight
24Insight in Mental Illness
- Generally speaking, insight is a state where a
person is aware of their mental illness and its
consequences. - Lack of insight is likely to make you LP exempt.
- By definition, a person has no insight that a
belief they hold might be false or delusional. - The difficulty comes with judging what counts as
lack of insight, and what subject of insight is
relevant. - There are various formulations, e.g
25Insight in Mental Illness
- Amador and David (1998) give six components
- Failure to recognise symptoms or disease.
- Misattribution of source of symptoms.
- Failure to appreciate implausibility of
experience of beliefs. - Failure to derive appropriate cognitive
representations despite recognition of pathology. - Inappropriate emotional reactions despite
recognition of pathology. - Inappropriate actions despite recognition of
pathology.
26Mental State Examination
- Notably, in the MSE, a standard examination used
by psychiatrists, insight assessment covers the
following - Does the patient think they are ill ?
- Do they think they have a mental illness ?
- Do they think they need treatment ?
- If so, do they accept medical treatment ?
27Informed Decisions
- An informed decision not to accept psychiatric
treatment does not itself indicate a lack of
insight. - But, a lack of insight can mean that such a
decision is not properly informed. - What counts as valid information ?
- Those who make the assessment are likely to
privilege information on the illness. - Potential patients are likely to privilege
information on the negative effects of
hospitalisation or medication. - Assessment of insight also implies that the
psychiatrist is correct in the first place !
28Insight into Current State
- Mill argues that ignorance for the danger of the
status quo is a reason for coercion. - If a public officer saw a person attempting to
cross a unsafe bridge, and there were no time to
warn him of his danger, they might seize him and
turn him back without any real infringement of
his liberty. - Nevertheless, when there is not a certainty, but
only a danger of mischief, he ought, I conceive,
to be only warned of the danger. - paraphrase
29Medication
- Medication presents more of a problem then simple
prevention. - The mortality rate for manic depression is
higher than it is for most types of heart disease
and many types of cancer. Yet this lethality
often is underemphasized, a tendency that may be
traceable to the erroneous but widespread belief
that suicide is volitional. - (Goodwin and Jamison, 1990)
- Mill would argue against forced medication purely
for someones own good. - However, it could be argued that forced
medication returns a person to a state where they
are better able to reason decisions. - In effect, it is a way of informing their
decisions.
30Mental Capacity
- But this could (and does) lead to a yo-yo effect.
- A person decides they dont want medication when
well, and is forcibly medicated when ill. - Neither Mill nor psychiatry provide a clear
answer. - Livermore et al (1968) argue that
- It is true that some mentally ill people may be
unable to comprehend a diagnosis and in these
instances, forced treatment may be more
appropriate. - Which seems to point toward the need for
decisions to be made on mental capacity, rather
than inferring it from a diagnosis of mental
illness.
31Responsibility and Relapse
- Interestingly, Mill might be more inclined to
forcibly treat someone if they had
responsibilities to fulfill. - if either from idleness or from any other
avoidable cause, a man fails to perform his legal
duties to others, as for instance to support his
children, it is no tyranny to force him to fulfil
that obligation - Which seems to suggest that person who falls
mentally ill should be required to take
responsibility for themselves if they stop
helpful medication.
32Conclusions
- By making those with mental illness LP exempt,
Mill has been rather sly in avoiding a difficult
and thorny problem. - Mill seems to be more liberal in terms of
criteria for compulsory treatment. - But less on the negative consequences of relapse.
- Mill requires no fewer value judgements and
subjective decisions to be made in the care of
the mentally ill. - Overall, I would suggest that his principles are
of questionable value when compared to the
current system.
33Conclusions
- Although, perhaps useful distinctions can be made
between compulsory detention and compulsory
medication. - Something which the psychiatric services user
movement is now focusing on (May et al, 2003).