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*Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust, Littlemore Mental Health Centre, Sandford Road, Oxford OX4 4XN, email: Josie.Ferguson{at}obmh.nhs.uk and Forensic Section, Association of European Psychiatrists
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden
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Introduction |
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Definition of forensic psychiatry |
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Historical factors |
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Criminal responsibility |
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In most of Europe it is now the case that provision is made for diminished responsibility findings in appropriate cases. Schizophrenia and related psychoses, organic psychoses and intellectual disability would usually attract such an outcome, with more variability in cases of affective disorder, personality disorder, substance misuse and paraphilias. Only in Germany (Nedopil & Otterman, 1993) and Austria (Schanda et al, 2000) is there also specific provision for involuntary detention following a conviction for an offence related to substance misuse.
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Forensic psychiatric facilities |
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A comprehensive range of secure psychiatric facilities is available across most of Western Europe, but Belgium is only now planning such provision (Naudts et al, 2005) and in Italy the well-known decision of 1978 to close general psychiatric hospitals left untouched and poorly developed facilities for forensic admissions (Fornari & Ferracuti, 1995). In Eastern Europe, high and medium secure units are available in Russia (Ruchkin, 2000), whereas in Poland there are new forensic facilities (Ciszewski & Sutula, 2000) and in Bulgaria there is a high-security unit within a general psychiatric hospital (Dontschev & Gordon, 1997), but forensic psychiatry is still very limited in other Eastern European countries.
Across most of Western Europe, with the deinstitutionalisation of general psychiatric hospitals over the past 30 years, there is now a trend towards a degree of reinstitutionalisation, with increasing numbers of admissions to forensic hospitals (Priebe et al, 2005), although reasons for this may also include higher rates of comorbid substance misuse and the higher level of concern about risk within society generally. The lowest prevalence rates in Europe of patients who have committed offences are found in Italy, Portugal and Greece. In Russia the trend towards deinstitutionalisation seen in Western Europe has not occurred (Ruchkin, 2000).
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Relationship between general and forensic psychiatry |
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Psychiatry in prison |
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Female patients who have committed offences |
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Sex offenders |
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Training in forensic psychiatry |
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Ethics in forensic psychiatry |
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Post-war European development has placed increasing emphasis on preservation of human rights, including pertaining to individuals with mentally illness. The European Court of Human Rights protects the human rights of persons subject to involuntary psychiatric commitment by creating supranational law in the spheres of unsoundness of mind, the lawfulness and conditions of detention, the right to a review of detention by a court, the right to information, and the right to respect for private and family life (Niveau & Materi, 2006). In five cases brought before the European Court of Human Rights, modifications have needed to be made to national mental health legislation, including England and Wales, Belgium and the Netherlands. Separately, monitoring of all aspects of detention and custody in the Council of Europe is carried out by the Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhumane and Degrading Treatment, which has reported adversely on aspects of psychiatric care in various countries including Greece and Turkey (Niveau & Materi, 2006). The protection of human rights of detained patients in European legislation may however be more evident than that which pertains to the victims of patients who have committed offences. In Russia, despite improved mental health legislation and ethical reform in the post-soviet period, monitoring of mental healthcare remains insufficiently robust.
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Conclusions |
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The legislative framework in Europe for the involuntary civil admission of mentally disordered patients varies widely across member states and clearly standardisation of reporting is required for adequate comparative analysis (Dressing & Salize, 2004). Similarly the assessment and reassessment of mentally disordered offenders and professional training standards vary markedly across European member states (Dressing & Salize, 2006). There is now, however, some momentum across Europe towards collaboration in forensic psychiatry in regard to consideration of agreement of the optimum ingredients required for training and best clinical practice. Over 15 years have now elapsed since Europe was divided according to ideological difference, and forensic psychiatry can now evolve in a Europe whose nations share a more common perspective. Research into forensic psychiatry in Europe will now require a cross-national approach, while increasingly fertilisation of ideas will benefit from mutual cooperation and coordination. A multilingual framework for communication would be the ideal. However, the reality is that the English language serves as a common medium of scientific discourse.
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References |
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