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In an update to this classic text, Ronald H. Rooney and Rebecca G. Mirick explore the best ways to work with unwilling clients. This book provides a framework for understanding the legal, ethical, and practical concerns, offering theory, treatment models, and specific practice strategies to facilitate collaborative, effective working relationships.
Social service --- Involuntary treatment --- Coerced treatment --- Coercive care --- Coercive treatment --- Compulsory treatment --- Enforced treatment --- Forced treatment --- Treatment, Involuntary --- Patients --- Therapeutics --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Legal status, laws, etc.
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Long description: Nach wie vor bestehen Unsicherheiten hinsichtlich der Indikation zivilrechtlicher und öffentlich-rechtlicher „Zwangsunterbringungen“ und Widersprüchlichkeiten in der Rechtsprechung der Obergerichte bezüglich der „Zwangsbehandlung“. Was ist Eigen- und was ist Fremdgefährdung? Aus welchem Grunde darf man welchen Patienten gegen seinen Willen in die Klinik bringen, dort gegen seinen Willen festhalten und darüber hinaus gar gegen seinen Willen behandeln? Nicht nur die Ausgestaltung der Begegnungssituation zwischen Patient, Arzt, Jurist und Öffentlichkeit, sondern auch das Gesetz über die Patientenverfügung vom 29.07.2009 fordern eine schlüssige Übersicht, die diese Problematik aktuell diskutiert und dem Leser in Fragen der Zwangseinweisung und Zwangsbehandlung Sicherheit gibt. Quote: „Ein unverzichtbarer Wegweiser und allen in die Problematik nolens volens Verwickelten nahezu vorbehaltlos zu empfehlen!“
Involuntary treatment. --- Coerced treatment --- Coercive care --- Coercive treatment --- Compulsory treatment --- Enforced treatment --- Forced treatment --- Treatment, Involuntary --- Patients --- Therapeutics --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Legal status, laws, etc.
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This philosophical treatise explores the place of paternalism in caring for others. It provides guidelines for balancing respect for the recipients' autonomy with the good that can be provided by intervening in their lives.
Respect for persons. --- Caring. --- Paternalism --- Autonomy (Philosophy) --- Community life. --- Involuntary treatment --- Associations, institutions, etc. --- Human ecology --- Philosophy --- Coerced treatment --- Coercive care --- Coercive treatment --- Compulsory treatment --- Enforced treatment --- Forced treatment --- Treatment, Involuntary --- Patients --- Therapeutics --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Parentalism --- Social classes --- Social control --- Social systems --- Conduct of life --- Empathy --- Helping behavior --- Persons --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Legal status, laws, etc.
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Coercive Care asks probing and challenging questions regarding the use of coercion in health care and the social services. The book combines philosophical analysis with comparative studies of social policy and law in a large number of industrialized countries.
Involuntary treatment --- Therapeutics. --- Medical treatment --- Therapy --- Treatment of diseases --- Treatments for diseases --- Clinical medicine --- Coerced treatment --- Coercive care --- Coercive treatment --- Compulsory treatment --- Enforced treatment --- Forced treatment --- Treatment, Involuntary --- Patients --- Therapeutics --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Legal status, laws, etc.
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This book presents the legal context and describes the ethical and practical challenges when using coercive measures in forensic psychiatric settings. A wide range of aspects relevant to the use of such measures, including environmental, patient-related, and staff-related factors, are explored, and the experience of coercive interventions is described from the staff and the patient perspective. Differences in jurisdictions and examples of good practice are highlighted. The authors are from a range of professional backgrounds, ensuring breadth as well as depth in discussion of the topic. The use of coercive measures, in particular restraint, seclusion, and involuntary medication, for the control of aggression in psychiatry remains controversial. Forensic mental health care deals with individuals who pose a risk to others and often present with significant management problems within institutions. The care of patients in these settings gives rise to debates about the balance between care and safety, and between the interests of the patients and those of the wider society to be protected. Despite these tensions, limited research has been conducted specifically on the use of coercive measures in forensic mental health care. This volume aims to fill the gap and will be of value to all professionals working in forensic psychiatric settings as well as to those working in general psychiatric and custodial settings, law professionals, and patients.
Medicine. --- Forensic medicine. --- Psychiatry. --- Medicine & Public Health. --- Forensic Medicine. --- Involuntary treatment. --- Involuntary treatment --- Forensic psychiatry. --- Forensic psychiatry --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Coerced treatment --- Coercive care --- Coercive treatment --- Compulsory treatment --- Enforced treatment --- Forced treatment --- Treatment, Involuntary --- Law and legislation --- Medical jurisprudence --- Psychiatry --- Mentally ill offenders --- Patients --- Therapeutics --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- Forensic medicine --- Injuries (Law) --- Jurisprudence, Medical --- Legal medicine --- Forensic sciences --- Medicine --- Medical laws and legislation --- Medicine and psychology --- Mental health --- Psychology, Pathological --- Medical jurisprudence.
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This volume presents a number of controversial cases of enforced medical treatment from around the globe, providing for the first time a common, biopolitcal framework for all of them. Bringing together all these real cases guarantees that a new, more complete understanding of the topic will be within grasp for readers unacquainted with the aspects involved in these cases. On the one hand, readers interested mainly in the legal and medical dimensions of cases like those considered will benefit from the explanation of the biopolitical framework within which each case develops. On the other hand, those focusing on only one of the situations presented here will find the parallels between the cases an interesting expansion of the complexity of the problem. Despite the book's ambitious goal, for those willing to use it as supplemental material or interested in only one of the cases, the chapters can function as self-standing pieces to be read separately. This volume will be a valuable tool for both academics and professionals. Bioethicists in both the analytic and continental traditions, will find the book interesting for not only the specific concepts and issues considered, but also for its constructive bridging of the two schools of thought. In addition to philosophers, the structure of this work will also appeal to lawyers, doctors, human rights activists, and anyone concerned in the most disparate way with real-life cases of enforced medical treatment.
Philosophy. --- Ethics. --- Theory of Medicine/Bioethics. --- Medical Law. --- Neurosciences. --- Political Science, general. --- Philosophy (General). --- Medical ethics. --- Public health laws. --- Neurosciences --- Morale --- Ethique médicale --- Santé publique --- Droit --- Ethics --- Philosophy --- Philosophy & Religion --- Involuntary treatment. --- Involuntary treatment --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Coerced treatment --- Coercive care --- Coercive treatment --- Compulsory treatment --- Enforced treatment --- Forced treatment --- Treatment, Involuntary --- Political science. --- Medical laws and legislation. --- Political Science. --- Patients --- Therapeutics --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- Administration --- Civil government --- Commonwealth, The --- Government --- Political theory --- Political thought --- Politics --- Science, Political --- Social sciences --- State, The --- Neural sciences --- Neurological sciences --- Neuroscience --- Medical sciences --- Nervous system --- Communicable diseases --- Public health --- Medical laws and legislation --- Biomedical ethics --- Clinical ethics --- Ethics, Medical --- Health care ethics --- Medical care --- Medicine --- Bioethics --- Professional ethics --- Nursing ethics --- Social medicine --- Deontology --- Ethics, Primitive --- Ethology --- Moral philosophy --- Morality --- Morals --- Philosophy, Moral --- Science, Moral --- Values --- Law and legislation --- Moral and ethical aspects --- Law, Medical --- Medical personnel --- Medical registration and examination --- Physicians --- Surgeons --- Medical policy --- Medical jurisprudence
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The confrontation that began when Iraq invaded Kuwait in August 1990 brought with it the threat that chemical and biological weapons might be used against the more than half a million military personnel the United States deployed to the region. To protect these troops from such threats, the Department of Defense wished to use drugs and vaccines that, not having been tested for use in these specific situations, were considered "investigational" by the federal Food and Drug Administration. This report examines the history of the Interim Rule, adopted in December 21, 1990, that authorized the Commissioner of Food and Drugs to waive informed consent for the use of investigational drugs and vaccines for certain military uses; how this authority was used for pyridostigmine bromide and botulinum toxoid during the Gulf War; and the subsequent controversy surrounding the rule, its application, and its implications. The report then analyzes the issues the Interim Rule raised when investigational drugs are used for such purposes and makes recommendations for dealing with similar situations in the future.
Chemical warfare --- Biological warfare --- Gases, Asphyxiating and poisonous --- Vaccines --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Involuntary treatment --- Persian Gulf War, 1991 --- Military Engineering --- Military & Naval Science --- Law, Politics & Government --- Desert Storm, Operation, 1991 --- Gulf War, 1991 --- Operation Desert Storm, 1991 --- War in the Gulf, 1991 --- Iraq-Kuwait Crisis, 1990-1991 --- Coerced treatment --- Coercive care --- Coercive treatment --- Compulsory treatment --- Enforced treatment --- Forced treatment --- Treatment, Involuntary --- Patients --- Therapeutics --- Asphyxiating gases --- Gas, Poisonous --- Gases, Irrespirable, offensive, and poisonous --- Gases, Poisonous --- Poison gas --- Poisonous gases --- Gases --- Hazardous substances --- Poisons --- Asphyxia --- Consent, Informed --- Consent to treatment --- Disclosure, Medical --- Medical disclosure --- Treatment, Consent to --- Consent (Law) --- Medical ethics --- Medical personnel --- Patient education --- Patient refusal of treatment --- Bacterial warfare --- Bacteriological warfare --- Biowarfare --- CBR warfare --- Disease warfare --- Germ warfare --- Pathogenic bacteria --- Bioengineering --- War --- Biologicals --- Chemistry in warfare --- Air warfare --- Security measures --- Antagonists --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- Physiological effect --- Malpractice --- War use --- United States --- Armed Forces --- Medical care. --- Chemical warfare. --- Cold War Biological warfare
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A brave and innovative book, Tranquil Prisons is a rare academic study of psychiatric treatment written by a former mental patient. Erick Fabris's original, multidisciplinary research demonstrates how clients are pre-emptively put on chemical agents despite the possibility of alternatives. Because of this practice, patients often become dependent on psychiatric drugs that restrict movement and communication to incarcerate the body rather than heal it. Putting forth calls for professional accountability and more therapy choices for patients, Fabris's narrative is both accessible and eye-opening."--Pub. desc. "Antipsychotic medications are sometimes imposed on psychiatric patients deemed dangerous to themselves and others. This is based on the assumption that treatment is safe and effective, and that recovery depends on biological adjustment. Under new laws, patients can be required to remain on these medications after leaving hospitals. However, survivors attest that forced treatment used as a restraint can feel like torture, while the consequences of withdrawal can also be severe.
Involuntary treatment --- Psychotropic drugs --- Mental illness --- Psychiatric ethics. --- Mental Disorders --- Commitment of Mentally Ill --- Ethics, Medical. --- Mentally Ill Persons --- Psychotropic Drugs --- Mental health services ethics --- Medical ethics --- Coerced treatment --- Coercive care --- Coercive treatment --- Compulsory treatment --- Enforced treatment --- Forced treatment --- Treatment, Involuntary --- Patients --- Therapeutics --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Medical Ethics --- Medicine --- Professionalism --- Bioethics --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Law and legislation --- Physiological effect. --- Chemotherapy. --- drug therapy. --- legislation & jurisprudence. --- adverse effects. --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- ethics --- Canada. --- Canada (Province) --- Canadae --- Ceanada --- Chanada --- Chanadey --- Dominio del Canad --- Dominion of Canada --- Jianada --- Kʻaenada --- Kanada --- Ḳanadah --- Kanadaja --- Kanadas --- Ḳanade --- Kanado --- Kanak --- Province of Canada --- Republica de Canad --- Yn Chanadey --- Dominio del Canadá --- Kaineḍā --- Kanakā --- Republica de Canadá --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Psychotropes --- Maladies mentales --- Psychiatres --- Aspect moral. --- Droit --- Effets physiologiques. --- Chimiothérapie. --- Déontologie.
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