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Government set to ride out storm over definition of mental disorder

Posted: 30 January 2003 | Subscribe Online


Some of the controversial proposals in the draft Mental Health Bill look set to remain, according to guidance on personality disorders released by the Department of Health last week.

Although the DoH has said it is reviewing about 2,000 consultation responses to the draft bill, the guidance states: "The proposed mental health legislation introduces a generic and inclusive definition of mental disorder." The definition is one of the proposals in the draft bill that has provoked the most opposition from mental health campaigners.

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The definition "will mean that in future people with all forms of personality disorder including psychopathic disorder can be subject to compulsion in the same way as those with other forms of mental illness".

It says how the broad definition, the introduction of compulsory treatment in the community and the abolition of the treatability test will "highlight the need for new community and in-patient services for people with personality disorders".

"This will place a new emphasis on the assessment and treatment of personality disorder as part of the legitimate business of mental health services," it states.

But Simon Lawton Smith, head of public affairs at the Mental After Care Association, said:"The way the mental health legislation chapter of the guidance is drafted suggests it's all cut and dried. You'd need to be a pretty optimistic person to believe that there is going to be any significant change to the proposed inclusive definition of mental disorder, or to the powers to detain and treat some people with a personality disorder diagnosis."
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The guidance also highlights how clinicians will need to develop skills in identifying and assessing personality disorders, with appropriate training provided.

It says the government is planning personality disorder centres to assess, treat and manage personality disorders in male offenders, most of whom will have a primary diagnosis of antisocial personality disorder. They will take referrals from a range of places including courts, prisons and general mental health services.

'Personality Disorder: No Longer a Diagnosis of Exclusion' from www.doh.gov.uk/mentalhealth/whatsnew.htm



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