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Human Rights in Psychiatry : Prospects and Dilemmas of Abolishing Coercion in Mental Health Care / by Dirk Richter.

Springer Nature - Springer Medicine (R0) eBooks 2025 English International Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Richter, Dirk, Author.
Series:
Medicine Series
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Nursing.
Psychiatry.
Medical ethics.
Medical Ethics.
Local Subjects:
Nursing.
Psychiatry.
Medical Ethics.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (IX, 140 p. 4 illus.)
Edition:
1st ed. 2025.
Place of Publication:
Cham : Springer Nature Switzerland : Imprint: Springer, 2025.
Summary:
The book describes the ethical lines of conflict, shows why coercion can no longer be justified and analyzes the consequences and dilemmas of a possible abolition of coercive measures in psychiatric care. The use of coercion in mental health care is one of the most controversial topics in psychiatric nursing and psychiatry. The conflict line centers around the UN-Convention in the Rights of People with Disabilities (CRPD). Advocates of the CRPD are pushing for the complete abolition of coercion while opponents see central medical and legal aspects of care for people with mental health problems at risk. Clinicians in conventional psychiatry, including many mental health nurses, primarily justify these measures because of the assumed benefits of coercion-associated care and with the argument that many people affected are unable to make appropriate decisions for their own health in a crisis situation. This argument also applies to human rights, for example by basing coercive measures in the event of suicidality on the right to life. Three central topics are developed in the book. First, it is shown that psychiatric coercion can no longer be justified because the current practice of psychiatric care does not meet the ethico-legal requirements for the use of coercion. Second, a human rights-based approach of psychiatric care is outlined, which is fundamentally based on the will and preferences of people with mental health problems. Third, the consequences and dilemmas are indicated, e.g., the issue of how to deal with suicidality or dementia without the use of coercion. This book is aimed to receive a specific attention from the psychiatric nursing community.
Contents:
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Human rights and coercion in mental health care - concepts, data and terminology
chapter 2. Human rights and psychiatric coercion - The legitimisation problem for (social) psychiatry
Chapter 3. The legitimisation of psychiatric measures against a person's will
Chapter 4. Psychiatric coercion - ethical conditions and empirical data
Chapter 5. Mental disorder – what is it and how valid is the definition?
Chapter 6. Psychosocial problems - The spectrum model
Chapter 7. Human rights-based psychosocial support
Chapter 8. Psychosocial support without coercion - consequences, dilemmas and possible ways out
Chapter 9. Epilogue: On the way to a post-liberal psychiatry?.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
ISBN:
3-031-98635-0
OCLC:
1535963535

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