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Treating the Youth of Today

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Title: Interaction of the Children Act, the MHA and the MCA treatment of the non-consenting youth Author: Enys Last modified by: Enys Created Date – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Treating the Youth of Today


1
Treating the Youth of Today Overview of the
legislation
  • Dr. Enys Delmage, MBChB, MRCPsych, BA Phil,
    MMedSc, LLM
  • Specialist Registrar in Adolescent Forensic
    Psychiatry

2
Legislative procedures enabling treatment
  • MHA 1983
  • MCA 2005
  • Common Law (duty of care and parental
    responsibility)
  • Children Acts (19892004)
  • Inherent Jurisdiction
  • NOT juvenile justice system OR education
  • Dont be anxious

3
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4
Child or young person?
  • Child
  • Children Act 1989 s105(1) and United Nations
    Convention on Rights of the Child (Article 1)
  • Any person under the age of 18
  • MHA (s55) Childunder 14, young person14, up
    to 18

5
What can children do?
  • 16 and 17 year olds leave full-time education,
    get full-time employment, consent to sexual
    intercourse or marriage (with one parents
    consent), or, under the Family Law Reform Act
    1969 (s8(1)) can consent to medical treatment
  • Children and Young Persons Act 1933 (s50) aged
    13-16 can work part-time (children aged under
    13 cannot legally work)
  • Age 14 can go to the pub, but no booze!
  • Age 14 you are responsible for wearing a
    seatbelt
  • Age 16 can drink beer or wine in a restaurant,
    with a meal
  • Age 17 can purchase an air rifle
  • Age 18 can buy fireworks
  • English Criminal Law aged below 14 still liable
    to criminal sanction aged below 10 not

6
Are age boundaries appropriate?
  • Children develop at different speeds
  • Gillick v West Norfolk and Wisbech AHA 1985 1
    AC 112
  • sufficient understanding and intelligence to
    understand fully what is proposed
  • Lord Templeman disagreed There are many things
    which a girl under 16 needs to practise but sex
    is not one of them
  • Need for Gillick competence inflexibility of age
    markers
  • Children under 16 are now afforded more rights to
    consent (but not refuse), instruct solicitors,
    etc.
  • Gillick-competent person under 18 objects to
    admission?
  • Has been overridden by parental responsibility
    Re R (A Minor) (Wardship Medical Treatment)
    1992 1 FLR 190 and Re W (A Minor) (Medical
    Treatment Courts Jurisdiction) 1992 4 All ER
    627

7
Choosing?
  • Mears and Worrall (Psychiatric Bulletin)
    surveyed psychiatrists views
  • Lack of definitive guidelines re which statute
  • Confusion re consent to treatment
  • Conflicts highlighted between social services and
    psychiatrists
  • Worried re stigmatising effect of the MHA

8
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9
MHA adaptations for young people
  • If patient under 16 yearly automatic MHRT
    (3-yearly for adults when renewed)
  • Section 131(1)(2) MHA 16 years can admit
    themselves informally even if parents object (if
    capacitous Re MB (Medical Treatment) 1997 2
    FLR 426 as test of capacity)
  • If wishing to admit themselves against parents
    wishes under 16 must prove Gillick competence
  • If parents object to that admission, their
    opinions should be seriously considered, but
    will not prevail (MHA 1983 Code of Practice
    (amended 2008))

10
MCA
  • Over 16 presumed capacitous until proven
    otherwise
  • Under 16 presumed to lack competence until
    proven otherwise
  • 16 and 17 year olds can no longer be kept in
    hospital under parental responsibility if they
    retain capacity and refuse admission MCA 2005
    (enforced Jan. 08)
  • 16 and 17 year olds lacking in capacity can be
    admitted and treated under MCA
  • ..or parental responsibility (R v Kirklees MBC ex
    parte C 1993 2 FLR 187 admission)
  • Treatment remains a grey area for 16/17 year olds
    under parental responsibility
  • s21 of MCA Lord Chancellor may (by order) make
    provision as to the transfer of proceedings
    relating to a person under 18 from the Court of
    Protection to a court having jurisdiction under
    the Children Act, or vice versa

11
MCA limitations
  • MCA not applicable to those under 16
  • If being kept in hospital under parental
    responsibility, no effective means of challenging
    their informal detention ?breach of Article
    5(4) too arbitrary
  • Detention under common law too close to
    Bournewood
  • If nobody with parental responsibility and
    incompetent child under 16 (very unlikely)
    court normally help (inherent jurisdiction)
  • 16 and 17 year olds may not make LPAs
  • 16 and 17 year olds may not make advance
    decisions re medical treatment
  • Cannot detain a 16 or 17 year old under MCA if
    the conditions amount to deprivation of liberty

12
Interesting quirk MCA Code of Practice
  • Lack of capacity may be for reasons other than
    those covered in s2 of the MCA
  • S2 an impairment of or a disturbance in the
    functioning of mind or brain MCA applies as it
    would to adults
  • MAY lack capacity to consent because you are
    simply overwhelmed by the implications of the
    decision MCA cannot be used
  • Some 16 and 17 year olds might be incapable of
    making treatment decisions due to developmental
    immaturity
  • Court may intervene for 16 and 17 year olds
    incapable of consenting
  • 18 year olds?

13
Children Act
  • Details who has parental responsibility may
    determine whether a child is admitted/treated
  • Section 8 orders
  • Prohibited steps order need consent of court to
    exercise parental responsibility over a specific
    issue
  • Specific issue order gives directions regarding
    an area of parental responsibility often where
    parents are in dispute Re HG High Court
    sanctioned sterilisation of a mentally subnormal
    17 year old

14
Intervention under the CA (1)
  • Child in need vs. child in danger of significant
    harm
  • Child in need provides support only (Part III
    of the Children Act 1989)
  • Unlikely to achieve or maintain
    health/development without LA
  • Health or development likely to be significantly
    impaired or further impaired without LA
  • Disabledmay include child with mental
    disorder, and health includes mental health
  • s20 LA must provide accommodation for child in
    need child then becomes a looked after child
    extra duties incumbent upon LA

15
Intervention under the CA (2)
  • Significant harm Parts IV and V
  • Implies that child protection procedures should
    be invoked
  • Usually refers to abuse but may not
  • Harm ill-treatment or impairment of health or
    development
  • May include children with a mental disorder/whose
    parent is suffering with a mental disorder
  • Compatible with Article 8 ECHR/HRA
  • Care Order (s31) CAUSATION significant harm
    must be associated with sub-standard parental
    care/child being beyond parental control use of
    the word reasonable in the statute

16
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17
Secure Accommodation
  • S25 allows for the restriction of liberty of
    children
  • Used for those with Hx of absconding or that are
    likely to injure themselves or others if in
    non-secure accommodation
  • Mostly looked after children (child in need
    that the LA has provided accommodation for under
    s20)
  • No good definition of secure accommodation.
  • but may include hospitals (A Metropolitan
    Council v DB 1997 1 FLR 767)
  • But may not
  • Re C (detention medical treatment) 1997 2 FLR
    180 (16 year old anorexic girl in clinic)
  • South Glamorgan County Council v W B 1993 1
    FLR 574 (15 year old girl in a psychiatric unit)
  • Section 25 provides safeguards

18
Section 25 safeguards
  • Looked after children must meet the criteria
  • History of absconding and likely to suffer
    significant harm
  • Likely to injure himself/others if kept in
    non-secure accommodation
  • Need Secure Accommodation Order if gt72 hours
    lasts up to 3 months 6-monthly renewals
  • Note if not looked after, or accommodated by a
    health or education authority, in residential
    care, nursing/mental nursing home NO safeguards
  • Note 2 s25 of CA should NOT cover Rx usually
    done by inherent jurisdiction or under MCA though
    can be done under Section 8

19
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20
Inherent Jurisdiction
  • Used to resolve issues where there is no
    statutory procedure cannot override statute
  • High Court parens patriae
  • Needs of the child are paramount for the court
    paramountcy principle is NOT incumbent upon
    anyone else best interests should be a
    significant consideration (MHA 1983 Code of
    Practice (amended 2008))
  • Usually used regarding treatment
  • Only applicable where child may suffer
    significant harm
  • Can make a child ward of the court
  • Court gains parental responsibility

21
Uses of Inherent Jurisdiction
  • Medical or psychiatric examination or assessment
  • Medical treatment Re L (Medical Treatment
    Gillick competency) 1998 2 FLR 810 medical
    treatment of a 14 year old boy where parents were
    reluctant to decide Gillick-competent minors
    refusal was overruled, and South Glamorgan CC v
    WB 1993 1 FLR 574 inherent jurisdiction used
    to detain and treat a girl who had refused any
    treatment, as it was in her best interests
  • Admission to hospital (for treatment)
  • Remains arbitrary

22
Parental Responsibility (Common Law)
  • All the rights, duties, powers, responsibilities
    and authority of which by law a parent of a child
    has in relation to the child and his property
    s3(1) Children Act
  • Who can use it?
  • Parents can consent to treatment on behalf of
    their child
  • Third parties (residence order, adoption, special
    guardianship order)
  • Local Authority EPO or Care Order (NOT police
    protection)
  • CAN be delegated by informal arrangement by a
    parent to another person

23
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24
Parental Responsibility
  • Section 3(5) allows someone (eg. police) without
    parental responsibility to do what is reasonable
    in all the circumstances of the case for the
    purpose of safeguarding or promoting the childs
    welfare
  • Just because a child is in social services
    accommodation does NOT mean that the LA have
    parental responsibility
  • In emergency treatment situations, the consent of
    any ONE person who has parental responsibility
    suffices (Lord Donaldson in Re R (A Minor)
    (Wardship Medical Treatment)) CA 1989

25
Parental Responsibility
  • Arbitrary de facto detention under parental
    responsibility informal
  • Tested in ECtHR Nielsen v Denmark (Article 5) -
    responsible exercise of custodial rights
  • Using it to admit a capacitous and objecting
    16/17 year old violates Article 5, in Jones
    opinion
  • Zone of Responsibility
  • Can parent reasonably be expected to make the
    decision?
  • Is there an indication that they are not working
    in the best interests of the child?

26
Parental Responsibility
  • Parents have no absolute right of refusal for
    medical treatment childs interests should come
    first (Glass v United Kingdom (pg. 108) LA (via
    care order) or courts NEED to be consulted on
    this (except in emergencies)
  • Charlotte Wyatt baby born at 26 weeks doctors
    stated that life-prolonging Rx should not be
    given if she developed a chest infection (best
    interests) parents disagreed court ruled in
    favour of clinicians
  • Special cases sterilisation
  • Lord Templeman (Re B (A Minor) (Wardship
    Sterilisation) 1987 2 All ER 206)
  • In my opinion sterilisation of a girl under 18
    should only be carried out with the leave of a
    High Court Judge
  • Gender reassignment? yet to be tested in court
  • ECT

27
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28
Get to the point Enys what is used?Consideration
s when choosing
  • What is the level of capacity required? Does the
    young person have it?
  • Protection of Human Rights (conflict between
    Article 8 and Article 2 Article 2 wins)
  • What specific treatment decision needs to be
    made? What are the objectives?
  • Will the child be afforded better due process
    under one Act than another?
  • Safeguards where refusal is overridden
  • Age
  • Is there a means of external review/audit?
  • If in doubt, and since contested cases are rare,
    speak to trust lawyers
  • Too much on these slides

29
Guidelines admission/treatment for the under 16s
  • Gillick incompetent, parents consent
  • Parental responsibility if in the zone, Inherent
    Jurisdiction if not, or MHA
  • Gillick incompetent, parents refuse
  • Inherent Jurisdiction/CA/MHA
  • Gillick competent and consents, and parents
    consent
  • All parties may legally consent
  • Gillick competent and consents, and parents
    refuse
  • Gillick competent, so may admit/treat (as long as
    the treatment is in the best interests of the
    child) courts may over-rule
  • Gillick competent and refuses, and parents
    consent
  • Parental responsibility if in the zone BUT Lord
    Donaldson commented that the importance of the
    refusal increases with age/MHA/Inherent
    Jurisdiction
  • Gillick competent and refuses, and parents refuse
    or are unavailable
  • Inherent Jurisdiction/CA/MHA
  • Gillick incompetent child and parents lack
    capacity, or parents are unavailable
  • Inherent Jurisdiction/CA/MHA/Best Interests

30
Guidelines admission/treatment for 16 and 17
year olds
  • Has capacity, consents and parents consent
  • Legally consented parents consent not necessary
  • Has capacity, consents but parents refuse
  • CAN consent (s8 Family Law Reform Act 1989 and
    Section 131 of MHA) consent can be over-ridden
    by court
  • Has capacity, refuses, parents consent
  • MHA/Inherent Jurisdiction in extreme
    circumstances (likely death or severe permanent
    injury MHA 1983 Code of Practice (amended
    2008)) doubt should be resolved in favour of the
    preservation of life for those under 18
  • Has capacity, refuses, parents refuse
  • MHA/Inherent Jurisdiction but see above
  • Lacks capacity due to mental disorder, parents
    consent
  • Admission Parental responsibility/MCA if no
    deprivation of liberty/MHA/Inherent Jurisdiction
  • Treatment in addition to the above, parental
    responsibility (if in the zone) may be used
  • Lacks capacity due to mental disorder, parents
    refuse
  • Inherent Jurisdiction/MCA if no deprivation of
    liberty/MHA/CA
  • Lacks capacity, not due to mental disorder (i.e.
    overwhelmed by the decision), parents consent
  • Inherent Jurisdiction/MHA/??parental
    responsibility if in the zone
  • Lacks capacity, not due to mental disorder,
    parents refuse
  • Inherent Jurisdiction/MHA

31
Lord Donaldson
In an emergency act to preserve life
32
References
  • A Survey of psychiatrists views of the use of
    the 1989 Act and the MHA in children and
    adolescents with mental health problems Mears,
    Worrall Psychiatric Bulletin (2001) 25 304-306
  • Children Act 1989 and 2004
  • United Nations Convention on the Rights of the
    Child
  • Mental Health Act 1983 Mental Health Act 2007
  • Mental Capacity Act 2005
  • European Convention on Human Rights and
    Fundamental Freedoms
  • Re HG (A Minor) (Application for Sterilisation)
    1993 1 FLR 587
  • Family Law Reform Act 1969
  • Children and Young Persons Act 1933
  • Gillick v West Norfolk and Wisbech AHA 1985 1
    AC 112
  • Re L (Medical Treatment Gillick competency)
    1998 2 FLR 810
  • Re MB (Medical Treatment) 1997 2 FLR 426
  • Re R (A Minor) (Wardship Medical Treatment)
    1992 1 FLR 190
  • Re W (A Minor) (Medical Treatment Courts
    Jurisdiction) 1992 4 All ER 627
  • A Metropolitan Council v DB 1997 1 FLR 767
  • HL v United Kingdom ECHR 45508/99
  • Nielsen v Denmark (1989) 11 EHRR 175
  • MHA manual 9th Edition, pg 463
  • Re R (A Minor) (Wardship Medical Treatment)
    1991 4 All ER 177

33
Email Address
  • enysdelmage_at_hotmail.com
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