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Blackstone's Guide to the Mental Health Amendment Act 2006

by Paul Bowen

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This new Blackstone's Guide provides the full text of the Mental Health Act 1983 and the main provisions of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 as amended by the MHA 2007, as well as the remaining provisions of the 2007 Act, together with an expert chapter by chapter narrative clearly explaining theimpact of the new Act on the 1983 and 2005 Acts. Key changes introduced by the Mental Health Act 2007 include;- A new definition of 'mental disorder'- The abolishment of existing classifications of 'mental illness', 'psychopathic disorder', 'mental impairment' and 'severe mental impairment'- The abolishment of the existing exclusions for prosmicuity, immoral conduct, sexual deviancy etc.- A new requirement that 'appropriate treatment' be available for all forms of mental disorder before detention may be authorised, whilst removing the 'treatability' requirement for patients suffering from psychopathic disorder- A new power to control and treat patients in the community- Amendments to the 'nearest relative' provisions to bring them into line with the ECHR- A new framework of safeguards for incapacitated de facto detained 'Bournewood' patients (to amend the Mental Capacity Act)The narrative clearly explains how the Act amends the1983 Act and the 2005 Act, discusses the interface between the two, and the human rights implications of compulsory detention and treatment by reference to key cases such as Bournewood, IH, and Von Brandenburg. The Guide's accessible and clearlayout makes it an ideal quick reference text. The appendices include the full text of the Mental Health Act 1983 as amended by the 2007 Act as well as the remaining provisions of the Mental Health Act 2007.The Blackstone's Guide Series delivers concise and accessible books covering the latest legislative changes and amendments. Published soon after enactment, they offer timely and expert commentary on the meaning and effects of the legislation, plus a copy of the Act itself. The Guides are acost-effective solution to key information needs and are the perfect companion for any practitioner needing to get up to speed with the latest changes.… (more)
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An essential reference. Julie Evans Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust
  RCPsychLibrary | Jan 29, 2014 |
ANALYSING THE NEW MENTAL HEALTH LAWS

Doughty Chambers barrister, Paul Bowen, specialises in human rights law and public law and has used his considerable knowledge to assemble an excellent guide to a technically complex area of social importance: mental health issue- the area few want to talk about.

The Mental Health Act of 2007, and the earlier Mental Capacity Act of 2005, are both reproduced in this guide that delivers the concise and accessible information on the latest legislative changes and amendments now in force.

CONTENTS OF THE BOOK

The recent history of the new legislation has been controversial, so the guide gives an introduction to the substantial amendments to the existing 1983 Act by analysing the amendments in two parts:

Part 1 covers reform of the 1983 Act with an introduction and background to the subject including the effect of the Human Rights Act. It then goes on to cover six headings: an overview of the 1983 Act and its amendments; amendments to the criteria for guardianship and detention under the 1983 Act; additional safeguards for patients in relation to admission and detention; supervised community treatment; medical treatment for mental disorder under the 1983 Act; and other amendments.

Part 2 covers the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and its amendments beginning with and introduction and overview. There are seven specific sections dealing with: care and treatment at common law; care and treatment without detention under the 2005 Act; detention for care and treatment under the 2005 Act; standard and urgent authorisations; representation of schedule A1 detainees; the Court of Protection, the Public Guardian, and the Court of Protection Visitors; and finally the interface between the detention and treatment regimes after the three main acts and at common law.

Apart from the full text of the three Acts, appendix 4 covers, in diagram form, the Standard Authorisation Procedure Under Schedule A1 of the 2005 Act which students and practitioners alike will find of great use. Cases and terms and abbreviations are also useful extras for the guide which gives timely and expert commentary on the meaning and effects of the three pieces of legislation.

A KEY INFORMATION GUIDE

The foreword, by James Munby, is sensitive and to the point when he highlights Bowen’s reassuring approach with the debate on whether the redefinition of ‘mental disorder’ and the replacement of the previous ‘treatability’ test, for instance, may prove to have what the judge describes as “the undesirable consequences that many feared”.

The hotchpotch of the provisions which have been amended are clearly the pathfinders for future argument and judgements with the inevitable human rights challenges.

THE FINAL CHAPTER

I found the final chapter one of the most important ones in the guide when Bowen covers the interface between the 1983 and 2005 Acts. The guide is also a practical approach because it prints the two Acts showing which words have been deleted and which words have been added by the 2007 Act, so that the reader can compare the ‘old’ and the ‘new’ texts at a glance.

The Mental Health Act guide from Blackstone is a fair statement of what has happened since the process was started ten years ago by Professor Richardson.

There is a certain inevitability in the somewhat frustrated view of Paul Bowen that “still, this is the legislation we have, so we had better get used to it”!

It is a fair statement of the anguish which the parliamentarians had when they debated these sections. I welcome this important guide as the perfect companion for all practitioners who need to be up to speed with this analysis of the latest set of rules since the introduction of the Human Rights Act whilst Blackstone’s guides remain cost effective solutions to the vastness, complexity and expense of legal rules today. ( )
  PhillipTaylor | Dec 27, 2008 |
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This new Blackstone's Guide provides the full text of the Mental Health Act 1983 and the main provisions of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 as amended by the MHA 2007, as well as the remaining provisions of the 2007 Act, together with an expert chapter by chapter narrative clearly explaining theimpact of the new Act on the 1983 and 2005 Acts. Key changes introduced by the Mental Health Act 2007 include;- A new definition of 'mental disorder'- The abolishment of existing classifications of 'mental illness', 'psychopathic disorder', 'mental impairment' and 'severe mental impairment'- The abolishment of the existing exclusions for prosmicuity, immoral conduct, sexual deviancy etc.- A new requirement that 'appropriate treatment' be available for all forms of mental disorder before detention may be authorised, whilst removing the 'treatability' requirement for patients suffering from psychopathic disorder- A new power to control and treat patients in the community- Amendments to the 'nearest relative' provisions to bring them into line with the ECHR- A new framework of safeguards for incapacitated de facto detained 'Bournewood' patients (to amend the Mental Capacity Act)The narrative clearly explains how the Act amends the1983 Act and the 2005 Act, discusses the interface between the two, and the human rights implications of compulsory detention and treatment by reference to key cases such as Bournewood, IH, and Von Brandenburg. The Guide's accessible and clearlayout makes it an ideal quick reference text. The appendices include the full text of the Mental Health Act 1983 as amended by the 2007 Act as well as the remaining provisions of the Mental Health Act 2007.The Blackstone's Guide Series delivers concise and accessible books covering the latest legislative changes and amendments. Published soon after enactment, they offer timely and expert commentary on the meaning and effects of the legislation, plus a copy of the Act itself. The Guides are acost-effective solution to key information needs and are the perfect companion for any practitioner needing to get up to speed with the latest changes.

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