严重残疾:5150个名称的退化部分。

Journal of law and health Pub Date : 2021-01-01
Diane Y Byun
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1972年7月1日生效,加州的《兰特曼-彼得里斯-肖特法案》(LPS法案)在美国开创了现代精神健康承诺程序的先例,以其起草人弗兰克·兰特曼、州议员尼古拉斯·c·彼得里斯和州参议员艾伦·肖特的名字命名,LPS法案旨在“结束对精神健康障碍患者的不适当、无限期和非自愿承诺”;"对患有精神健康障碍或因慢性酒精中毒而受损的人提供及时的评估和治疗";以及“保障和保护公共安全”。尽管引用了这些意向性条款,但LPS法案违反了它自己的立法意图,因为它在强制执行非自愿精神病学拘留指定(也称为“5150指定”)时包含了“严重残疾”。首先,警察在被指定为5150人时,不需要作出精神健康障碍的医疗诊断;"严重残疾"的广泛范围增加了警察可以非自愿运送的人数,增加了精神病患者不适当和非自愿收容的可能性。第二,"严重残疾"的范围很广,造成5150名被指定的人(无论是否被不当指定)被送往资源有限(例如缺乏床位和精神科工作人员)的lps指定医院;这导致患者等待精神病评估和/或医院床位的时间过长。第三,不清楚LPS法案在保护“公共安全”的保障中是寻求为精神病患者提供保护,还是提供对精神病患者的保护;在5150个指定中包含“严重残疾”表明,LPS法案为公众提供了一种双重手段,即在“公共安全”的幌子下,将精神疾病患者、贫困人口和无家可归者赶出街头。本文提出以下建议,以帮助纠正在5150指定中实施广义“严重残疾”的影响:(1)从5150标准中删除“严重残疾”;(2)通过建立外展和教育项目,将社区与精神卫生宣传工作结合起来;(3)实施以客户为中心的方法,通过恢复性警务和建立恢复性法院与精神健康障碍患者互动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gravely Disabled: The Vestigial Prong of 5150 Designations.

Effective July 1, 1972, California's Lanterman-Petris-Short Act (LPS Act) set the precedent for modern mental health commitment procedures in the U.S. named after its authors, State Assemblyman Frank Lanterman and State Senators Nicholas C. Petris and Alan Short, the LPS Act sought to "end the inappropriate, indefinite, and involuntary commitment of persons with mental health disorder"; to "provide prompt evaluation and treatment of persons with mental health disorders or impaired by chronic alcoholism"; and to "guarantee and protect public safety." Despite citing to these articles of intent, the LPS Act violates its own legislative intent through its inclusion of "gravely disabled" in its enforcement of involuntary psychiatric hold designations (also known as "5150 designations"). First, police officers are not required to make a medical diagnosis of a mental health disorder at the time of a 5150 designation; the broad scope of "gravely disabled" increases the number of persons police officers can involuntarily transport, increasing the likelihood of inappropriate and involuntary commitment of persons with mental health disorders. Second, the broad scope of "gravely disabled" produces an onslaught of 5150-designated persons (whether improperly designated or not) being sent to LPS-designated hospitals with limited resources (e.g., lack of beds and psychiatric staff); this results in patients waiting for an inordinate amount of time for a psychiatric evaluation and/or a hospital bed. Third, it is unclear whether the LPS Act sought to provide protection for the mentally ill or to provide protection from the mentally ill in its guarantee of protecting "public safety"; the inclusion of "gravely disabled" in 5150 designations indicates that the LPS Act provided the public with a duplicitous means of removing the mentally ill, impoverished, and houseless from the streets under the guise of "public safety." This Paper suggests the following to help remedy the effects of implementing the broadly defined "gravely disabled" in 5150 designations: (1) Remove "gravely disabled" from the 5150 criteria; (2) integrate the community with mental health advocacy efforts by creating outreach and education programs; and (3) implement a client-centric approach to interacting with persons with mental health disorders through restorative policing and the establishment of a restorative court.

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