Outpatient civil commitment of the mentally ill: An overview and an update

Civil commitment to outpatient psychiatric treatment has only recently become the subject of significant discussion, not only in the professional literature, but also in state legislatures and mental health departments. Task Forces from the American Psychiatric Association and the National Center for State Courts have drafted detailed reports on outpatient commitment, and a growing number of states have modified their statutes and regulations governing the process. The author presents the existing research literature on outpatient commitment in practice, reports recent statutory developments, and discusses specific areas of concern for those planning to propose or implement new procedures, including the right to refuse treatment, confidentiality, and the duty to warn or protect third parties. Language: en

[1]  T. L. Scheid-Cook,et al.  The North Carolina experience with outpatient commitment: a critical appraisal. , 1987, International journal of law and psychiatry.

[2]  E. Mulvey,et al.  The promise and peril of involuntary outpatient commitment. , 1987, The American psychologist.

[3]  B. Bursten Posthospital mandatory outpatient treatment. , 1986, The American journal of psychiatry.

[4]  J. Geller Rights, wrongs, and the dilemma of coerced community treatment. , 1986, The American journal of psychiatry.

[5]  M. Durham,et al.  The empirical consequences and policy implications of broadening the statutory criteria for civil commitment. , 1985, Yale law & policy review.

[6]  J. B. Myers Involuntary civil commitment of the mentally ill: a system in need of change. , 1984, Villanova law review.

[7]  R. Miller,et al.  Outpatient commitment: treatment in the least restrictive environment? , 1984, Hospital & community psychiatry.

[8]  R D Miller,et al.  The use of plea bargaining in civil commitment. , 1984, International journal of law and psychiatry.

[9]  R. Miller,et al.  The effect of witnesses, attorneys, and judges on civil commitment in North Carolina: a prospective study. , 1983, Journal of forensic sciences.

[10]  P. Appelbaum,et al.  The inappropriateness of “least restrictive alternative” analysis for involuntary procedures with the institutionalized mentally ill , 1983, The Journal of psychiatry & law.

[11]  H. Moss,et al.  Family management in the prevention of exacerbations of schizophrenia: a controlled study. , 1982, The New England journal of medicine.

[12]  Robert D. Miller,et al.  The Adequacy of Commitment Evaluations Performed by Psychiatric and Non-psychiatric Physicians , 1982, The Journal of psychiatry & law.

[13]  V. Hiday,et al.  The Least Restrictive Alternative to Involuntary Hospitalization, Outpatient Commitment: Its Use and Effectiveness , 1982, The Journal of psychiatry & law.

[14]  Robert D. Miller The least restrictive alternative: Hidden meanings and agendas , 1982, Community mental health journal.

[15]  G. Hogarty,et al.  Family treatment of adult schizophrenic patients: a psycho-educational approach. , 1980, Schizophrenia bulletin.

[16]  S. Sharfstein,et al.  Toward increased psychiatric presence in community mental health centers. , 1979, Hospital & community psychiatry.

[17]  H. Lamb,et al.  Drs. Lamb and Zusman Reply , 1979 .

[18]  P. Fink,et al.  Whatever happened to psychiatry? The deprofessionalization of community mental health centers. , 1979, The American journal of psychiatry.

[19]  Winslow Ww The changing role of psychiatrists in community mental health centers. , 1979 .

[20]  H. Lamb,et al.  Primary prevention in perspective. , 1979, The American journal of psychiatry.

[21]  J. Borus Issues critical to the survival of community mental health. , 1978, The American journal of psychiatry.

[22]  E. Bassuk,et al.  Deinstitutionalization and mental health services. , 1978, AMHC forum.

[23]  L. Stein,et al.  Community Treatment of the Chronic Patient: Research Overview , 1978 .

[24]  B. Brown,et al.  The lightning rod of human service delivery , 1978 .

[25]  P. Wald,et al.  The politics of mental health advocacy in the United States. , 1978, International journal of law and psychiatry.

[26]  Fourth Circuit. Semler v. Psychiatric Institute of Washington, D.C. 17 Feb 1976. , 1976, The Federal reporter.

[27]  Thomas K. Zander Civil commitment in Wisconsin: the impact of Lessard v. Schmidt. , 1976, Wisconsin law review.

[28]  S. Kirk,et al.  Community mental health myths and the fate of former hospitalized patients. , 1975, Psychiatry.

[29]  A. Thomas,et al.  Attitudes and behaviors of acute and chronic schizophrenic patients regarding ambulatory treatment. , 1974, The American journal of psychiatry.

[30]  J. Fleming,et al.  The patient or his victim: the therapist's dilemma. , 1974, California law review.

[31]  G. Morris Institutionalizing the rights of mental patients: committing the legislature. , 1974, California law review.

[32]  C. Hersch Social history, mental health, and community control. , 1972, The American psychologist.

[33]  D. L. Chambers Alternatives to Civil Commitment of the Mentally Ill: Practical Guides and Constitutional Imperatives , 1972 .

[34]  L. Howard,et al.  Ideology and role function of the nurse in community mental health. , 1971, Nursing research.

[35]  R. Leifer The medical model as ideology. , 1970, International journal of psychiatry.

[36]  M. R. Kaufman Psychiatry. Why "medical" or "social" model? , 1967, Archives of general psychiatry.

[37]  B. Bloom The “medical model,” miasma theory, and community mental health , 1965 .

[38]  J. Denny,et al.  The role of the psychologist on mental hospital wards as defined by the expectant-others , 1962 .

[39]  F. V. Harper,et al.  The Duty to Control the Conduct of Another , 1934 .