Concordance of the Indian Mental Healthcare Act 2017 with the World Health Organization's Checklist on Mental Health Legislation

被引:26
|
作者
Duffy, Richard M. [1 ]
Kelly, Brendan D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Tallaght Hosp, Trinity Ctr Hlth Sci, Trinity Coll Dublin, Dept Psychiat, Dublin D24 NR0A, Ireland
来源
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEMS | 2017年 / 11卷
关键词
Human rights; Jurisprudence; Psychiatry; Mental disorders; Legislation; Coercion; HUMAN-RIGHTS; FORENSIC PSYCHIATRY; PREVALENCE; DISORDERS; BILL; CONVENTION; DISABILITY; SECLUSION; RESTRAINT; SERVICES;
D O I
10.1186/s13033-017-0155-1
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Background: India is revising its mental health legislation with the Indian Mental Healthcare Act 2017 (IMHA). When implemented, this legislation will apply to over 1.25 billion people. In 2005, the World Health Organization (WHO) published a Resource Book (WHO-RB) on mental health, human rights and legislation, including a checklist of 175 specific items to be addressed in mental health legislation or policy in individual countries. Even following the publication of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) (2006), the WHO-RB remains the most comprehensive checklist for mental health legislation available, rooted in UN and WHO documents and providing the most systematic, detailed framework for human rights analysis of mental health legislation. We sought to determine the extent to which the IMHA will bring Indian legislation in line with the WHO-RB. Methods: The IMHA and other relevant pieces of Indian legislation are compared to each of the items in the WHORB. We classify each item in a binary manner, as either concordant or not, and provide more nuanced detail in the text. Results: The IMHA addresses 96/175 (55.4%) of the WHO-RB standards examined. When other relevant Indian legislation is taken into account, 118/175 (68.0%) of the standards are addressed in Indian law. Important areas of low concordance include the rights of families and carers, competence and guardianship, non-protesting patients and involuntary community treatment. The important legal constructs of advance directives, supported decision-making and nominated representatives are articulated in the Indian legislation and explored in this paper. Conclusions: In theory, the IMHA is a highly progressive piece of legislation, especially when compared to legislation in other jurisdictions subject to similar analysis. Along with the Indian Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2016, it will bring Indian law closely in line with the WHO-RB. Vague, opaque language is however, used in certain contentious areas; this may represent arrangement-focused rather than realisation-focused legislation, and lead to inadvertent limitation of certain rights. Finally, the WHO-RB checklist is an extremely useful tool for this kind of analysis; we recommend it is updated to reflect the CRPD and other relevant developments.
引用
收藏
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] A Focus Group Study of Indian Psychiatrists' Views on Electroconvulsive Therapy under India's Mental Healthcare Act 2017: 'The Ground Reality is Different'
    Duffy, Richard M.
    Gulati, Gautam
    Paralikar, Vasudeo
    Kasar, Niket
    Goyal, Nishant
    Desousa, Avinash
    Kelly, Brendan D.
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY MEDICINE, 2019, 41 (06): : 507 - 515
  • [32] Cross-National Associations Between Gender and Mental Disorders in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys
    Seedat, Soraya
    Scott, Kate Margaret
    Angermeyer, Matthias C.
    Berglund, Patricia
    Bromet, Evelyn J.
    Brugha, Traolach S.
    Demyttenaere, Koen
    de Girolamo, Giovanni
    Maria Haro, Josep
    Jin, Robert
    Karam, Elie G.
    Kovess-Masfety, Viviane
    Levinson, Daphna
    Medina Mora, Maria Elena
    Ono, Yutaka
    Ormel, Johan
    Pennell, Beth-Ellen
    Posada-Villa, Jose
    Sampson, Nancy A.
    Williams, David
    Kessler, Ronald C.
    ARCHIVES OF GENERAL PSYCHIATRY, 2009, 66 (07) : 785 - 795
  • [33] Negotiating South-South cooperation for mental health: the World Health Organization and the African Mental Health Action Group, 1970s-90s
    Pringle, Yolana
    MEDICAL HISTORY, 2021, 65 (04) : 403 - 419
  • [34] Mental health disorders and utilization of mental healthcare services in United Nations personnel
    Brown, Adam D.
    Schultebraucks, Katharina
    Qian, Meng
    Li, Meng
    Horesh, Danny
    Siegel, Carol
    Brody, Yosef
    Amer, Abdalla Mansour
    Lev-Ari, Rony Kapel
    Mas, Francis
    Marmar, Charles R.
    Farmer, Jillann
    GLOBAL MENTAL HEALTH, 2020, 7
  • [35] Subthreshold Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Surveys
    McLaughlin, Katie A.
    Koenen, Karestan C.
    Friedman, Matthew J.
    Ruscio, Ayelet Meron
    Karam, Elie G.
    Shahly, Victoria
    Stein, Dan J.
    Hill, Eric D.
    Petukhova, Maria
    Alonso, Jordi
    Andrade, Laura Helena
    Angermeyer, Matthias C.
    Borges, Guilherme
    de Girolamo, Giovanni
    de Graaf, Ron
    Demyttenaere, Koen
    Florescu, Silvia E.
    Mladenova, Maya
    Posada-Villa, Jose
    Scott, Kate M.
    Takeshima, Tadashi
    Kessler, Ronald C.
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2015, 77 (04) : 375 - 384
  • [36] Expanding the Circle: Decreasing American Indian Mental Health Disparities through Culturally Competent Teaching about American Indian Mental Health
    Mays, Vickie M.
    Gallardo, Miguel
    Shorter-Gooden, Kumea
    Robinson-Zanartu, Carol
    Smith, Monique
    McClure, Faith
    Puri, Siddarth
    Methot, Laurel
    Ahraitty, Glenda
    AMERICAN INDIAN CULTURE AND RESEARCH JOURNAL, 2009, 33 (03): : 61 - 83
  • [37] MENTAL-HEALTH LEGISLATION - A REVIEW OF SOME INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCES
    BERTOLOTE, JM
    REVISTA DE SAUDE PUBLICA, 1995, 29 (02): : 152 - 156
  • [38] Psychiatric advance directives in Australian mental-health legislation
    Ouliaris, Calina
    Kealy-Bateman, Warren
    AUSTRALASIAN PSYCHIATRY, 2017, 25 (06) : 574 - 577
  • [39] Integration of Perinatal Mental Health into Maternal and Child Care: Progress and Challenges from the World Health Organization's Perspective
    Paricio-del-castillo, Rocio
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH, 2024, 19
  • [40] The role of religious advisors in mental health care in the World Mental Health surveys
    Kovess-Masfety, Vivianne
    Evans-Lacko, Sara
    Williams, David
    Andrade, Laura Helena
    Benjet, Corina
    Ten Have, Margreet
    Wardenaar, Klaas
    Karam, Elie G.
    Bruffaerts, Ronny
    Abdumalik, Jibril
    Haro Abad, Josep Maria
    Florescu, Silvia
    Wu, Benjamin
    De Jonge, Peter
    Altwaijri, Yasmina
    Hinkov, Hristo
    Kawakami, Norito
    Caldas-de-Almeida, Jose Miguel
    Bromet, Evelyn
    de Girolamo, Giovanni
    Posada-Villa, Jose
    Al-Hamzawi, Ali
    Huang, Yueqin
    Hu, Chiyi
    Viana, Maria Carmen
    Fayyad, John
    Elena Medina-Mora, Maria
    Demyttenaere, Koen
    Lepine, Jean-Pierre
    Murphy, Samuel
    Xavier, Miguel
    Takeshima, Tadashi
    Gureje, Oye
    SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2017, 52 (03) : 353 - 367