Article 14 - Liberty and security of the person
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References
Disability-specific
instruments
Principles for
the Protection of Persons with Mental Illness and the Improvement of Mental
Health Care
Adopted by the United Nations General Assembly, forty-sixth session, Resolution
46/119 of 17 December 1991
Principles 12-22
Principle 12 - Notice of rights
• A patient in a mental health facility shall be informed as soon as possible
after admission, in a form and a language which the patient understands, of
all his or her rights in accordance with these Principles and under domestic
law, which information shall include an explanation of those rights and how
to exercise them.
• If and for so long as a patient is unable to understand such information,
the rights of the patient shall be communicated to the personal representative,
if any and if appropriate, and to the person or persons best able to represent
the patient's interests and willing to do so.
• A patient who has the necessary capacity has the right to nominate a person
who should be informed on his or her behalf, as well as a person to represent
his or her interests to the authorities of the facility.
Principle 13 - Rights and conditions in mental health facilities
• Every patient in a mental health facility shall, in particular, have the right
to full respect for his or her:
a. Recognition everywhere as a person before the law;
b. Privacy;
c. Freedom of communication, which includes freedom to communicate with other persons in the facility; freedom to send and receive uncensored private communications; freedom to receive, in private, visits from a counsel or personal representative and, at all reasonable times, from other visitors; and freedom of access to postal and telephone services and to newspapers, radio and television;
d. Freedom of religion or belief.
• The environment and living conditions in mental health facilities shall be
as close as possible to those of the normal life of persons of similar age and
in particular shall include:
a. Facilities for recreational and leisure activities;
b. Facilities for education;
c. Facilities to purchase or receive items for daily living, recreation and communication;
d. Facilities, and encouragement to use such facilities, for a patient's engagement in active occupation suited to his or her social and cultural background, and for appropriate vocational rehabilitation measures to promote reintegration in the community. These measures should include vocational guidance, vocational training and placement services to enable patients to secure or retain employment in the community.
• In no circumstances shall a patient be subject to forced labour. Within the
limits compatible with the needs of the patient and with the requirements of
institutional administration, a patient shall be able to choose the type of
work he or she wishes to perform.
• The labour of a patient in a mental health facility shall not be exploited.
Every such patient shall have the right to receive the same remuneration for
any work which he or she does as would, according to domestic law or custom,
be paid for such work to a non-patient. Every such patient shall, in any event,
have the right to receive a fair share of any remuneration which is paid to
the mental health facility for his or her work.
Principle 14 - Resources for mental health facilities
• A mental health facility shall have access to the same level of resources
as any other health establishment, and in particular:
a. Qualified medical and other appropriate professional staff in sufficient numbers and with adequate space to provide each patient with privacy and a programme of appropriate and active therapy;
b. Diagnostic and therapeutic equipment for the patient;
c. Appropriate professional care; and
d. Adequate, regular and comprehensive treatment, including supplies of medication.
• Every mental health
facility shall be inspected by the competent authorities with sufficient frequency
to ensure that the conditions, treatment and care of patients comply with these
Principles.
Principle 15 - Admission principles
• Where a person needs treatment in a mental health facility, every effort shall
be made to avoid involuntary admission.
• Access to a mental health facility shall be administered in the same way as
access to any other facility for any other illness.
• Every patient not admitted involuntarily shall have the right to leave the
mental health facility at any time unless the criteria for his or her retention
as an involuntary patient, as set forth in Principle 16, apply, and he or she
shall be informed of that right.
Principle 16 - Involuntary admission
• A person may (a) be admitted involuntarily to a mental health facility as
a patient; or (b) having already been admitted voluntarily as a patient, be
retained as an involuntary patient in the mental health facility if, and only
if, a qualified mental health practitioner authorized by law for that purpose
determines, in accordance with Principle 4, that person has a mental illness
and considers:
a. That, because of that mental illness, there is a serious likelihood of immediate or imminent harm to that person or to other persons; or
b. That, in the case of a person whose mental illness is severe and whose judgement is impaired, failure to admit or retain that person is likely to lead to a serious deterioration in his or her condition or will prevent the giving of appropriate treatment that can only be given by admission to a mental health facility in accordance with the principle of the least restrictive alternative.
In the case referred to in subparagraph (b), a second such mental health practitioner, independent of the first, should be consulted where possible. If such consultation takes place, the involuntary admission or retention may not take place unless the second mental health practitioner concurs.
• Involuntary admission or retention shall initially be for a short period as
specified by domestic law for observation and preliminary treatment pending
review of the admission or retention by the review body. The grounds of the
admission shall be communicated to the patient without delay and the fact of
the admission and the grounds for it shall also be communicated promptly and
in detail to the review body, to the patient's personal representative, if any,
and, unless the patient objects, to the patient's family.
• A mental health facility may receive involuntarily admitted patients only
if the facility has been designated to do so by a competent authority prescribed
by domestic law.
Principle 17 - Review body
• The review body shall be a judicial or other independent and impartial body
established by domestic law and functioning in accordance with procedures laid
down by domestic law. It shall, in formulating its decisions, have the assistance
of one or more qualified and independent mental health practitioners and take
their advice into account.
• The review body's initial review, as required by paragraph 2 of Principle
16, of a decision to admit or retain a person as an involuntary patient shall
take place as soon as possible after that decision and shall be conducted in
accordance with simple and expeditious procedures as specified by domestic law.
• The review body shall periodically review the cases of involuntary patients
at reasonable intervals as specified by domestic law.
• An involuntary patient may apply to the review body for release or voluntary
status, at reasonable intervals as specified by domestic law.
• At each review, the review body shall consider whether the criteria for involuntary
admission set out in paragraph 1 of Principle 16 are still satisfied, and, if
not, the patient shall be discharged as an involuntary patient.
• If at any time the mental health practitioner responsible for the case is
satisfied that the conditions for the retention of a person as an involuntary
patient are no longer satisfied, he or she shall order the discharge of that
person as such a patient.
• A patient or his personal representative or any interested person shall have
the right to appeal to a higher court against a decision that the patient be
admitted to, or be retained in, a mental health facility.
Principle 18 - Procedural safeguards
• The patient shall be entitled to choose and appoint a counsel to represent
the patient as such, including representation in any complaint procedure or
appeal. If the patient does not secure such services, a counsel shall be made
available without payment by the patient to the extent that the patient lacks
sufficient means to pay.
• The patient shall also be entitled to the assistance, if necessary, of the
services of an interpreter. Where such services are necessary and the patient
does not secure them, they shall be made available without payment by the patient
to the extent that the patient lacks sufficient means to pay.
• The patient and the patient's counsel may request and produce at any hearing
an independent mental health report and any other reports and oral, written
and other evidence that are relevant and admissible.
• Copies of the patient's records and any reports and documents to be submitted
shall be given to the patient and to the patient's counsel, except in special
cases where it is determined that a specific disclosure to the patient would
cause serious harm to the patient's health or put at risk the safety of others.
As domestic law may provide, any document not given to the patient should, when
this can be done in confidence, be given to the patient's personal representative
and counsel. When any part of a document is withheld from a patient, the patient
or the patient's counsel, if any, shall receive notice of the withholding and
the reasons for it and shall be subject to judicial review.
• The patient and the patient's personal representative and counsel shall be
entitled to attend, participate and be heard personally in any hearing.
• If the patient or the patient's personal representative or counsel requests
that a particular person be present at a hearing, that person shall be admitted
unless it is determined that the person's presence could cause serious harm
to the patient's health or put at risk the safety of others.
• Any decision whether the hearing or any part of it shall be in public or in
private and may be publicly reported shall give full consideration to the patient's
own wishes, to the need to respect the privacy of the patient and of other persons
and to the need to prevent serious harm to the patient's health or to avoid
putting at risk the safety of others.
• The decision arising out of the hearing and the reasons for it shall be expressed
in writing. Copies shall be given to the patient and his or her personal representative
and counsel. In deciding whether the decision shall be published in whole or
in part, full consideration shall be given to the patient's own wishes, to the
need to respect his or her privacy and that of other persons, to the public
interest in the open administration of justice and to the need to prevent serious
harm to the patient's health or to avoid putting at risk the safety of others.
Principle 19 - Access to information
• A patient (which term in this Principle includes a former patient) shall be
entitled to have access to the information concerning the patient in his or
her health and personal records maintained by a mental health facility. This
right may be subject to restrictions in order to prevent serious harm to the
patient's health and avoid putting at risk the safety of others. As domestic
law may provide, any such information not given to the patient should, when
this can be done in confidence, be given to the patient's personal representative
and counsel. When any of the information is withheld from a patient, the patient
or the patient's counsel, if any, shall receive notice of the withholding and
the reasons for it and it shall be subject to judicial review.
• Any written comments by the patient or the patient's personal representative
or counsel shall, on request, be inserted in the patient's file.
Principle 20 - Criminal offenders
• This Principle applies to persons serving sentences of imprisonment for criminal
offences, or who are otherwise detained in the course of criminal proceedings
or investigations against them, and who are determined to have a mental illness
or who it is believed may have such an illness.
• All such persons should receive the best available mental health care as provided
in Principle 1. These Principles shall apply to them to the fullest extent possible,
with only such limited modifications and exceptions as are necessary in the
circumstances. No such modifications and exceptions shall prejudice the persons'
rights under the instruments noted in paragraph 5 of Principle 1.
• Domestic law may authorize a court or other competent authority, acting on
the basis of competent and independent medical advice, to order that such persons
be admitted to a mental health facility.
• Treatment of persons determined to have a mental illness shall in all circumstances
be consistent with Principle 11.
Principle 21 - Complaints
Every patient and former patient shall have the right to make a complaint through
procedures as specified by domestic law.
Principle 22 - Monitoring and remedies
States shall ensure that appropriate mechanisms are in force to promote compliance
with these Principles, for the inspection of mental health facilities, for the
submission, investigation and resolution of complaints and for the institution
of appropriate disciplinary or judicial proceedings for professional misconduct
or violation of the rights of a patient.