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Opinion and debate |
South Kensington and Chelsea Mental Health Centre, 1 Nightingale Place, London SW10 9NG
The Gordon Hospital, Bloomburg Street, London SW1V 2RH
In a psychiatric intensive care unit in central London 17% of consecutive admissions between 1 October 1997 and 1 October 1998 were foreign nationals from European Union (EU) countries. It was our experience that the process of repatriation varied considerably depending on the country involved. There have been several reports of the experience of hospitalisation of foreign nationals for the treatment of psychiatric disorders (Ktiouet, 1982; Postrach, 1989; Bar-El et al, 1991). In the UK, Jauhar & Weller (1982) and Cooper (1997) described admissions to hospital from Heathrow airport, of which a proportion were foreign nationals. The only references to the process of repatriation, however, are descriptions of French nationals repatriated from various countries via medical insurance companies (Sauteraud & Hajjar, 1992; Zittoun et al, 1994; Sauteraud, 1997) and of the experience of two nurses who escorted a patient from England to Sierra Leone (Birch, 1983).
We discuss our experience of arranging repatriation and some of the relevant legal, ethical and clinical issues involved. We also report the results of contacting all the EU embassies regarding the process of repatriating psychiatric patients to their respective countries.
Legal aspects
Section 86 of the Mental Health Act 1983 allows the Home Secretary to authorise "the removal of alien patients" to another country. This applies to patients who are neither British citizens nor Commonwealth citizens having the right of abode in the UK and who are receiving in-patient treatment for mental illness (not other categories of mental disorder as defined under the Act). These patients must be detained for treatment under certain sections of the Mental Health Act (excluding sections 35, 36 and 38). Section 86 does not apply to informal patients or to those granted extended leave of absence under section 17.
In order for the Home Secretary to authorise repatriation certain conditions must be met. Proper arrangements must have been made for the removal of patients, including travel arrangements and nurse escorts, and for treatment in the receiving country.
Repatriation should be in the patient's best interests and the approval of a Mental Health Review Tribunal, which will have considered these facts, must have been obtained. Section 86 also enables the Home Secretary to give directions for patients to be kept under escort on their journey home until arrival at any specified place in the receiving country. In practice, the Home Office is involved in only one or two cases each year in which repatriation is arranged under Section 86.
For patients who are willing to travel and for whom suitable arrangements have been made, application to the Home Office is not necessary. If patients are subject to a Section 41 restriction order, they may be conditionally discharged from section 37, with the conditions being that they return to their country of residence and accept appropriate treatment there. The restriction order may remain in place and will apply if the patient returns to the UK.
The current arrangements would seem to satisfy the obligations in respect of "persons of unsound mind" arising under article 5 of the European Convention of Human Rights (the right to liberty and security of the person). The impact of the Human Rights Act 1998 should therefore be minimal with regard to the process of repatriation.
Financial aspects
There is provision within the National Health Service Act for patients detained under the Mental Health Act (but not for voluntary patients) who are receiving treatment from the NHS to have the cost of repatriation paid for by the NHS. Prior to 1 April 1999 the Department of Health set aside a budget, held by Leeds Health Authority, for overseas visitors entitled to free treatment from the NHS. This applied to all EU citizens. They made decisions regarding funding for repatriation that largely depended on the relative cost of repatriation compared with financing ongoing treatment in the UK. Providers paid and were refunded. However, from 1 April 1999, this budget ceased to exist. Instead, money was allocated directly to health authorities and decisions regarding repatriation were made locally. We are unclear as to how these local arrangements are working in practice.
Clinical, practical and ethical issues
In our experience the following steps are required in order to arrange repatriation.
Contact the relevant embassy
This should be done soon after admission as planning repatriation and
obtaining information can take longer than expected.
Arrange for an interpreter in order to interview the patient (and his
or her relatives), if necessary
The complex issues involved in conducting interviews with interpreters have
been described by Westermeyer
(1990). Obtaining suitable
interpreters can be difficult. The Mental Health Act 1983 Code of Practice
(Department of Health and Welsh Office,
1999) states that local and health authorities and trusts have a
responsibility for arranging an easily accessible pool of trained interpreters
and for ensuring that staff receive sufficient guidance in the use of
interpreters. It also recommends that friends and relatives should not be used
as interpreters. The Royal College of Psychiatrists has a list of
psychiastrists who speak a variety of foreign languages, which can be a useful
resource.
Obtain information regarding previous contact with psychiatric
services in the patient's country of origin and establish which hospital in
that country should be responsible for their care
Patients, or relatives, may know the name of the patient's local hospital
and even a specific psychiatrist. Embassies are usually willing to find
details of the appropriate hospital.
Obtain specific information regarding patient's past psychiatric
history, including previous diagnosis, treatment, response to treatment and
any history of dangerousness
Some embassies liaise directly with the psychiatrist and relatives to
obtain this information (eg. French embassy). Others provide a telephone
number to contact a specific doctor (eg. German embassy). The latter can lead
to problems if, for example, little English is spoken by hospital staff. We
found that certain countries (eg. Ireland and Italy) were more reluctant to
release information without patients' consent, despite patients being unable
to give informed consent. Sometimes consultants provide considerable
information by telephone, even when unable to release written
documentation.
Translation of correspondence
Some embassies (eg. French embassy) will automatically translate
correspondence. Others cannot provide any translation service.
Continue treatment until patient is fit to travel
Patients are treated in hospital in the UK until either they are well
enough to be discharged and make their own travel arrangements, or
repatriation is arranged. Airlines and Eurostar have the right to refuse
patients who they consider to be too ill to travel.
Consider repatriation and discuss this with patient
Often patients agree to repatriation shortly after admission and
arrangements can be made for travel to take place as soon as patients are well
enough. If patients refuse to be repatriated there are three options. First,
treatment can continue until patients gain some insight, at which time they
often agree to continue their treatment at a hospital in their country of
origin. Second, treatment may result in sufficient improvement for patients to
be safely discharged and to make their own travel arrangements. Problems can
arise if patients are well enough to be discharged but do not want to return
home, as they may fail the test of habitual residence, a condition of
eligibility for benefits such as housing benefit and income support introduced
by regulation 4 of the Income-Related Benefits Schemes (Miscellaneous
Amendments) (No. 3) Regulations 1994. Third, repatriation under Section 86 can
be arranged, as described above. This is a last resort and, in our experience,
rarely necessary.
Decisions regarding whether repatriation is in patients' best interests depend on a number of factors. These include whether patients are known to psychiatric services in their own country and patients' support network available there. Their proposed plans for remaining in the UK, including entitlement to housing and benefits, are also important. Language is a consideration, as it is plainly difficult for anyone to be treated in a hospital where they cannot communicate with staff. Relatives may not always, for practical and financial reasons, be able to travel to the UK. It can be distressing and frustrating if they cannot have contact with patients or have difficulty communicating with staff by telephone. However, for practical reasons, it is extremely difficult to force patients to be repatriated if they adamantly refuse.
Arrange date and process of transfer
The receiving hospital should agree to make a bed available. UK hospital
staff are responsible for travel arrangements, including nurse escorts.
Escorts may accompany patients as far as the station or airport in the
receiving country, or all the way to the hospital. French nationals usually go
to a central hospital in Paris for assessment prior to transfer to their local
hospital, even if they are known to their local hospital that has agreed to
admission. The French embassy arrange a document that allows for patients to
remain detained from the time they leave England to the time they arrive at
the hospital in Paris. In countries where this arrangement is not possible,
patients can abscond on arrival at the airport in their country.
Embassies
To prepare this paper we contacted all EU embassies and conducted telephone interviews with the member of staff usually involved in the repatriation of patients. A list of questions, which can be helpful when contacting an embassy following the admission of a foreign national, was used for the interviews. The questions are listed in Table 1. The results of the enquiry are listed in Table 2.
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References
BAR-EL, I., KALIAN, M., EISENBERG, B., et al (1991) Tourists and psychiatric hospitalization with reference to ethical aspects concerning management and treatment. Medicine & Law, 10, 487-492.
BIRCH, H. (1983) The repatriation of Henry. Nursing Times, 79, 44-46.
COOPER, C. (1997) Landing in difficulties. Nursing Times, 93, 18.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND WELSH OFFICE (1999) The Mental Health Act 1983 Code of Practice. London: HMSO.
JAUHAR, P. & WELLER, M. P. I. (1982) Psychiatric
morbidity and time zone changes: a study of patients from Heathrow airport.
British Journal of Psychiatry,
140,
231-235.
KTIOUET, J. (1982) The delirious migrant. Annales Médico-Psychologiques, 140, 629-633.
POSTRACH, F. (1989) Foreign citizens as patients of a psychiatric clinic. Psychiatrie, Neurologie and Medizinische Psychologie, 41, 392-399.
SAUTERAUD, A. (1997) Occurrence and management of psychiatric pathology in travellers. Médecine Tropicale, 57, 457-460.
SAUTERAUD, A. & HAJJAR, M. (1992) Psychotic disorders: higher incidence during travels in Asia. Presse Médicale, 21, 805-810.
WESTERMEYER, J. (1990) Working with an interpreter in psychiatric assessment and treatment. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 178, 745-749.[CrossRef][Medline]
ZITTOUN, C., RECASENS, C. & DANTCHEV, N. (1994) Psychopathology and travel: psychiatric patient repatriation. Annales Médico-Psychologiques, 152, 696-700.
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