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A tribunal in trauma

Posted: 21 September 2005 | Subscribe Online


 The shocking truth about the Mental Health Review Tribunal system, uncovered by Community Care this week, is made more worrying by the doubling of its workload which - according to the government's own estimates - will be caused if the Mental Health Bill becomes law.

Moreover, the King's Fund states this week that government estimates of numbers who will be subject to community treatment orders are too low. In other words, the tribunal faces meltdown.

The Mental Health Bill's provisions increasing the remit of the tribunal were clearly designed to allay fears that its other provisions - including community treatment orders and extensions of the ability to detain patients - were too draconian.
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They are indeed. The power to treat people compulsorily even if they gain no therapeutic benefit is unacceptable. It legitimises the use of psychiatric medication purely to control "abnormal" or "unacceptable" behaviour. Let's be honest: this has always been the case. But it has not been enshrined in law. To change that makes the worst nightmares of service users come true.

The tribunal is already a scandal, effectively meaning that many people diagnosed with mental illness and deprived of their liberty have no real means of redress. To allow the system to fall into confusion shows utter disrespect for those who rely on it. Would appeals involving any other group be allowed to be arbitrarily deleted from the database? Sadly, for many users of the mental health system this indifference will be no surprise.
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The government should not wait until it is forced to act by cases brought under the Human Rights Act. And surely this must be the final nail in the coffin of the Mental Health Bill, since with the tribunal in such turmoil any right of appeal in the bill won't be worth the paper it's written on.


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