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Dorset Healthcare NHS Trust, Hahnemann House, West Cliff, Bournemouth BH2 5JW, Dorset, e-mail: lawminr{at}ntlworld.com
Dorset Healthcare NHS Trust
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Abstract |
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The aim of this study was to seek the views of consultant psychiatrists on the legal framework they would use when considering treatment with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). A questionnaire, consisting of three clinical vignettes, was sent to 70 consultants in the Wessex rotation (East Dorset/Hampshire region).
RESULTS
A total of 56 questionnaires were returned; a response rate of 80%. Most consultant psychiatrists agree when giving ECT to capacitated and non-consenting patients. However, there was a lack of consensus when dealing with seemingly incapacitated but compliant patients.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
More clarification in this area is needed. Trusts can assist clinicians by devising their own policies based on nationally agreed standards of best practice. The treatment of mentally incapacitated but compliant patients is an area of practice where uncertainty exists. If proceeding under common law in such cases, it is good practice to discuss with relatives/carers and obtain a second opinion from a consultant colleague. The most recent Bournewood judgement and the new Mental Health Bill will have further implications for clinical practice.
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Introduction |
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| Vignette 1 A 30-year-old lady with resistant depression was admitted informally because of a high suicide risk. In the past, she has made several suicide attempts and has ended up on the intensive care unit after a serious overdose. Various pharmacological treatments have all been ineffective so far, but she has responded well to ECT previously. You judge that ECT is the only realistic option. She understands your rationale for recommending ECT but nevertheless refuses to have it.
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| Vignette 2 A 68-year-old man was admitted informally following the death of his wife 2 months ago. He has become severely depressed and withdrawn, with significant weight loss. He is barely communicative, refusing to eat or drink and take his antidepressant despite encouragement from staff. You have decided to proceed with ECT as you consider his condition to be critical. The next-of-kin is in agreement with the treatment plan. He does not appear to object to a pre-ECT work-up, i.e. he has allowed staff to take his blood, has had an ECG and a chest X-ray. He appears to passively accept whatever treatment is proposed. However, you believe that despite discussions, he does not understand what ECT really entails.
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| Vignette 3 A 45-year-old man with a history of bipolar affective disorder was admitted informally following a depressive relapse. Despite pharmacological treatment, he has become increasingly deluded and paranoid and his behaviour extremely risky. As he has responded well to ECT in the past and you judge his condition as potentially life-threatening, you decide to proceed with ECT. During discussion of the treatment plan with him, he thanks you for offering ECT. He tells you that he deserves it and the only reason he needs ECT is because he has committed unforgivable sins and this will get rid of all evils inside him.
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The aim of this study was to examine what stance senior psychiatrists will take in practice, in view of available opinions, such as that provided by the Mental Health Act Commission (2003) and the ninth edition of the Mental Health Act Manual (Jones, 2004). We also sought the legal opinion of one medical defence organisation.
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Method |
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Participants were presented with three vignettes and asked how they would proceed in each case. Vignette 1 refers to a seemingly capacitated adult who refuses to have ECT (see below) whereas vignettes 2 and 3 both refer to incapacitated and compliant patients (one passively compliant and one complying because of his delusional beliefs). Clinicians had to choose one of three options:
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Results |
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For vignette 1, the majority (89%) would proceed under a Section of the MHA, with 6% opting for common law only after obtaining a second opinion from a colleague and 5% not contemplating ECT. For vignette 2, 51% of clinicians would proceed under the MHA and 49% would proceed under common law (27% after seeking a second opinion). For vignette 3, 75% would use the MHA and 24% common law (17% after seeking a second opinion). The remaining 1% decided against giving ECT. These responses are summarised in Fig. 1.
One interesting observation was that recently appointed consultants seemed less inclined to use the MHA, especially with incapacitated and compliant patients, than more experienced colleagues. For example, in vignette 2 only 37% of those with less than 6 years consultant experience would use the MHA compared with 58% of those with between 6 and 10 years experience and 50% of those with greater than 10 years experience. In vignette 3, 56% of those with less than 6 years experience would use the MHA compared with 91% and 80% of the more experienced groups, respectively. Although the numbers are small, this trend is apparent for all three vignettes.
Numerous comments were received demonstrating a wide range of differing opinions, which were strongly expressed. Most of these comments focused on the requirement to protect patients civil liberties. There were few comments suggesting the existence of specific protocols within individual trusts.
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Discussion |
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A few consultants were opposed to using ECT in vignette 1, because this would mean overriding the patients autonomy. This decision also appears to have been influenced by their personal attitudes to ECT. Rethink is opposed to the use of ECT in capacitated and non-consenting patients (Rethink, 2004), including those detained under the MHA, unless they have a life-threatening condition. The proposed mental health legislation would allow competent detained patients to refuse ECT, except when expressly authorised by a tribunal or where it constitutes emergency treatment.
Opinion was divided among psychiatrists when dealing with incapacitated and compliant patients, with almost equal numbers opting for the MHA or common law (vignette 2). However, more consultants (75%) were in favour of the MHA in vignette 3 where a man agrees to ECT on the basis of his delusions. Psychiatrists may feel more comfortable with using the MHA when someone is demonstrating clear psychotic symptoms.
There has been ongoing debate as to whether mentally incapacitated but compliant patients should be detained in order to administer ECT lawfully. The General Medical Council guidance on incapacitated patients (General Medical Council, 1998) states that if they comply, treatment may be given if in their best interests. However, if they do not comply, they may be compulsorily treated under the MHA. The more recent MHA Commission view, however, is that detaining such patients for the purpose of ECT may be unnecessary and therefore may constitute unlawful use of the MHA (Mental Health Act Commission, 2003). The ninth edition of the Mental Health Act Manual (Jones, 2004) expressed the view that under common law ECT can be given lawfully to the incapacitated patient without consent provided it satisfies the best interests test. He added that, it is neither necessary nor legally proper to make an application in respect of a patient who is not attempting to leave hospital and whose treatment is authorised under common law.
In such cases, the Special Committee on ECT (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2005) has issued some guidance on good practice such as attempts should be made to improve the patients clinical condition so he or she is able to consent to the treatment proposed, the need to discuss with family and carers and to seek a second opinion from a consultant colleague. The patient should be reassessed following each treatment with regard to both capacity and compliance, and if remains compliant, a further treatment can be given. Advice from the Medical Defence Union suggests that in vignettes 2 and 3, treatment can be justified under common law, although it is good practice to discuss with relatives and get the opinion of a colleague.
The ruling in the Bournewood case (R v. Bournewood Community and Mental Health NHS Trust, 1998) meant that mentally incapacitated patients who were compliant with admission to hospital could be admitted under common law. However, in the recent Bournewood judgement (HL v. UK, 2004) of the European Court of Human Rights, HL was found to be deprived of his liberty, which was unlawful. The implication is that incapacitated patients who are under constant supervision and control of staff and not free to leave, would now be subject to a MHA assessment.
This survey, which was conducted prior to the release of the European Court of Human Rights judgment (HL v. UK, 2004), reveals both a lack of consensus among consultants and a disparity between clinical practice and available guidance. Despite this guidance, more than half of the senior psychiatrists surveyed instinctively preferred to use the MHA when treating incapacitated but compliant patients with ECT. It appears from comments made that this is because clinicians wish to do everything possible to provide the best legal safeguards for patients, to ensure protection from possible abuse. It will be interesting to see what impact the latest Bournewood judgment has on clinical practice. Although this ruling was concerned with consent to admission rather than treatment, it is likely that there would be implications for those patients described in vignettes 2 and 3. We believe the effects of this will be that more incapacitated but compliant patients will be treated under the MHA, which in any case, is in line with the current practice of many clinicians.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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JONES, R. (2004) Mental Health Manual (9th edn). London: Sweet & Maxwell.
MENTAL HEALTH ACT COMMISSION (2003) Tenth Biennial Report 2001-2003 Placed Amongst Strangers. London: Stationery Office.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR CLINICAL EXCELLENCE (2003) Guidance on the Use of Electroconvulsive Therapy. London: NICE.
RETHINK (2004) Policy Statement 58. http://www.rethink.org/news+campaigns/policies/58-ect.htm
ROBINSON, R. (2003) ECT and the Human Rights Act 1998. Journal of Mental Health Law, July, 66 -70.
ROSE, D., WYKES, T., LEESE, M., et al (2003)
Patients perspectives on electroconvulsive therapy: systematic review.
BMJ, 326, 1363
-1365.
ROYAL COLLEGE OF PSYCHIATRISTS (2005) ECT Handbook. The Third Report of the Royal College of Psychiatrists Special Committee on ECT (Council Report CR128). London: Royal College of Psychiatrists.
UK ECT REVIEW GROUP (2003) Efficacy and safety of electroconvulsive therapy in depressive disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet, 361, 799 -808.[CrossRef][Medline]
HL v. UK, European Court of Human Rights (application no. 45508/99). Judgment Strasbourg, 5 October 2004.
R. v. Bournewood Community Mental Health NHS Trust, ex parte L [1998], 3 WLR 108, House of Lords, AllER 319.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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C. Hilton Changes between the 1959 and 1983 Mental Health Acts (England & Wales), with particular reference to consent to treatment for electroconvulsive therapy. History of Psychiatry, June 1, 2007; 18(70 Pt 2): 217 - 229. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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