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Compulsory order forecasts 'too low'

Posted: 21 September 2005 | Subscribe Online


The government has underestimated the number of people likely to be subject to compulsory community treatment if the draft Mental Health Bill becomes law, researchers have found.

The study by the King's Fund estimates that 7,800 to 13,000 people could be subject to the planned community-based treatment orders in England and Wales within 15 years.

It concludes that the new powers will not open the floodgates to compulsion, but says the government's assumption that about 1,450 people will be placed on the new orders in the first few years after they are introduced is too low.
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Paul Farmer, chairman of the Mental Health Alliance, which is campaigning against the bill, said compulsory community treatment could "only be safely introduced under very narrow conditions for a very small group of people with strict limitations".

Meanwhile, a study published in medical journal the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews claims that compulsory treatment may not be an effective alternative to standard care.


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