List of Contributors vii
Introduction xi
Thomas W. Kallert, Juan E. Mezzich and John Monahan
SECTION 1 Conceptual and clinical aspects of coercive treatment 1
1. Person-centred psychiatry perspectives on coercion and
cooperation 3
Juan E. Mezzich
2. Coercive treatment and stigma – is there a link? 13
Wolfgang Gaebel and Harald Zaske
3. Mandated psychiatric treatment in the community – forms,
prevalence, outcomes and controversies 33
John Monahan
4. Is it possible to define a best practice standard for
coercive treatment in psychiatry? 49
Tilman Steinert and Peter Lepping
5. How to de-escalate a risk situation to avoid the use of
coercion 57
Dirk Richter
SECTION 2 Legal aspects of coercive treatment 81
6. Psychiatry and the law – do the fields agree in their views
on coercive treatment? 83
Julio Arboleda-Florez
7. Reducing discrimination in mental health law – the 'fusion'
of incapacity and mental health legislation 97
George Szmukler and John Dawson
8. Mental health care and patients' rights – are these two
fields currently compatible? 121
Thomas W. Kallert
SECTION 3 Ethical aspects of coercive treatment 151
9. Cross-cultural perspectives on coercive treatment in
psychiatry 153
Ahmed Okasha and Tarek Okasha
10. Historical injustice in psychiatry with examples from Nazi
Germany and others – ethical
lessons for the modern professional 161
Rael Strous
11. Paternalism in mental health – when boots are superior to
Pushkin 175
Tom Burns
SECTION 4 Users' views on coercive treatment 185
12. The moral imperative for dialogue with organizations of
survivors of coerced psychiatric human rights violations 187
David W. Oaks
13. Resisting variables – service user/survivor perspectives on
researching coercion 213
Jasna Russo and Jan Wallcraft
14. Seventy years of coercion in psychiatric institutions,
experienced and witnessed 235
Dorothea S. Buck-Zerchin
15. Coercion – point, perception, process 245
Dorothy M. Castille, Kristina H. Muenzenmaier and Bruce G. Link
SECTION 5 Coercion and undue influence in decisions to participate in psychiatric research 269
16. Ethical issues of participating in psychiatric research on
coercion 271
Lars Kjellin
17. Coercion and undue influence in decisions to participate in
psychiatric research 293
Paul S. Appelbaum, Charles W. Lidz and Robert Klitzman
Index 315
Professor Kallert has been active in the field of mental health services research for many years. He was co-ordinator of the EC-funded research project, European evaluation of coercion in psychiatry and harmonisation of best clinical practice (EUNOMIA). He has published 6 books, more than 35 chapters in books, and more than 125 articles in peer-reviewed journals. He has received the Hermann-Simon-Prize for Social Psychiatry, and the Hans-Heimann-Prize of the German Society of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Neurosciences. He is an Honorary Member of the World Psychiatric Association.
Dr. Mezzich was Chair of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) Section on Classification and Diagnostic Assessment, and a member of the ICD-10 Mental Disorders Workgroup and the DSM-IV Task Force. He has authored over 200 scientific journal articles and book chapters and 25 books and monographs primarily on psychiatric diagnosis and epidemiology from clinical, philosophical, statistical, and cultural perspectives and more recently on person-centered psychiatry and medicine. He has received six Honorary Doctorates from universities in the Americas and Europe as well as the Simon Bolivar Award of the American Psychiatric Association, the Medal for Extraordinary Merit of the Medical Council of Peru, and the Linneaus Medal of Uppsala University in Sweden. He is President of the InternationalNetwork for Person-centered Medicine.
Professor Monahan is well known internationally for his numerous publications and presentations in mental health law, for his leadership of the MacArthur Research Network on Violence, Coercion and Competence and of the current MacArthur Research Network on Mandated Treatment in the Community, and for his generous support and encouragement of scholars in coercion and in all areas of mental health law.
“Summing up then, this is a rich and valuable collection. It comes at a time when ideas about both coercion and treatment are being revised, and in addition to raising more practical and policy-related challenges, it demonstrates important philosophical issues requiring further attention.” (Metapsychology Online, 23 April 2013)
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