

If the patient requests it, a rights adviser will also help the patient
apply for an appeal or acquire legal services.If a patient is placed on a
Form 3 or Form 4, they have the right to appeal the decision to a Consent
and Capacity Board which will hear the patient's and physician's case. A
patient's involuntary status is reviewed by the Board every year whether the
patient requests it or not. The board is composed, at the minimum, of a
lawyer, a psychiatrist, and a member of the community (often a family member
of someone with mental illness).If the patient or physician disagrees with
the Board's decision, they may appeal to the Ontario Superior Court of
Justice. Community treatment orders:The OMHA states that "the purpose of a
community treatment order is to provide a person who suffers from a serious
mental disorder with a comprehensive plan of community-based treatment or
care and supervision that is less restrictive than being detained in a
psychiatric facility.
and to provide such a plan for a person who, as a result of his or her
serious mental disorder, experiences this pattern: The person is admitted to
a psychiatric facility where his or her condition is usually stabilized;
after being released from the facility, the person often stops the treatment
or care and supervision; the person’s condition changes and, as a result,
the person must be re-admitted to a psychiatric facility." When a physician
decides that a patient meets the criteria for a community treatment order, a
treatment plan is developed with the involvement of all people involved in
the plan. In addition to the physician and the patient, people involved in
the plan may include other health care workers, social workers, family
members, the substitute decision maker, or others. Once the treatment plan
is agreed to by all parties, the patient is required to follow the plan
while living in the community. Failing to follow the plan can result in the
person being readmitted to the hospital on a Form 1.
One notable aspect of the community treatment orders is that it allows
anyone who is named in the treatment plan to communicate with each other for
the purpose of providing treatment, care, or supervision of the person. By
removing barriers to communication between members of the health care team,
appropriate interventions can be quickly applied when the person is at
risk.A community treatment order lasts six months and can be renewed if
needed. A person on a community treatment order has the right to see a
rights advisor and to appeal to the Consent and Capacity Board. The Board
will review community treatment order every year whether the patient
requests it or not. Miscellany:Under the OMHA it is not permitted to
administer psychosurgery to a patient who is considered incompetent to
consent to treatment.
Ontario Mental Health Act
The Ontario Mental Health Act (OMHA) is an Ontario law which regulates the
administration of Mental Health Care. The main purpose of the law is to
regulate the involuntary admission of people into a psychiatric hospital.
Since the changes brought about in 2000 under Bill 68 (often referred to as
Brian's Law, named after Brian Smith who was shot dead in 1995 by a person
suffering from paranoid schizophrenia), the act allows for a community
treatment order by the attending physician. This order is intended to
provide comprehensive treatment outside of a psychiatric facility.
Assessment orders:An individual can be brought into a hospital under three
conditions. When a person is acting in a disorderly manner, the act allows
the police to take someone to be examined by a physician if they believe
that the person is a danger to himself or herself, a danger to others, or
the person is not able to care for himself or herself. In situations where
there is no immediate danger, anyone can bring evidence to a justice of the
peace that the person is a danger to himself or herself, a danger to others,
or is not able to care for himself or herself.
The judge can then order a person to be examined by a physician and fill out
a Form 2 authorizing the police to take the person to a physician for
examination. Finally, any physician who has assessed a person within the
last 7 days, and feels that the person may be a danger to himself or
herself, a danger to others, or the person is not able to care for himself
or herself, then the physician can order that the person undergo a
psychiatric assessment by filling out a Form 1 authorizing the police to
bring the person in for examination. Involuntary admissions:Once a person
has been brought to a psychiatric facility to be assessed, the physician may
hold them there for up to 72 hours on an application for psychiatric
assessment (Form 1). This form allows the person to be held at a psychiatric
facility for assessment, but does not itself permit any treatment without
the persons consent, consent to treatment is not covered under the mental
health act but rather the health care consent act.
The physician must also fill out a Form 4 to notify the person and inform
them of why they're being held.At the end of the 72 hours permitted by a
Form 1, the person must either be released, be admitted as a voluntary
patient, or continue to be held as an involuntary patient with a certificate
of involuntary admission (Form 3). The physician who signs the Form 3 must
be different than the physician who signed the initial Form 1. A Form 3
allows the patient to be held for two weeks and the patient must be notified
with a Form 30. At the end of the two weeks, if the facility is to continue
to keep the patient on an involuntary basis, a certificate of renewal (Form
4) must be filled out. The first time a Form 4 is filled out, it is valid
for one month, the second time it is filled out it is valid for two months,
each time after that, it is valid for three months. Each time a Form 4 is
filled out, another Form 30 must be filled out, notifying the patient.
Rights of the patient:A physician who places a person on a Form 3 or Form 4
is required to notify a rights adviser who is required to meet with and
explain to the patient what his or her rights are.





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