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Involuntary treatment --- Involuntary treatment --- Mentally ill --- Mentally ill --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Internement (Psychiatrie) --- Internement (Psychiatrie) --- Law and legislation --- Law and legislation --- Commitment and detention --- Commitment and detention --- Droit --- Droit
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Psychiatry --- Involuntary treatment --- Mentally ill --- Psychiatrie --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Internement (Psychiatrie) --- History --- Commitment and detention --- Histoire
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Juvenile delinquency --- Délinquance juvénile --- Juvenile justice, Administration of --- Justice pour mineurs --- Child welfare --- Protection de la jeunesse --- Administration --- Social service --- Involuntary treatment
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Involuntary treatment --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Psychiatric hospital care --- Hôpitaux psychiatriques --- Mentally ill --- Personnes vivant avec un trouble de santé mentale --- Law and legislation --- Droit --- Soins --- Care
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Toute personne atteinte de troubles mentaux doit rester libre de décider ou non de se faire soigner ; en cela les troubles mentaux ne diffèrent pas des troubles physiologiques.Lorsque, dans l'exercice de cette liberté, elle décide de se faire soigner, elle peut, à cette fin, s'adresser au praticien ou à l'équipe de santé mentale de son choix et, le cas échéant, consentir à son hospitalisation. Il s'agit alors de soins psychiatriques libres, puisque décidés avec son consentement, auxquels cette personne pourra mettre fin à tout moment. À cette modalité de soins librement consentis , dont le législateur précise qu'elle doit être privilégiée lorsque l'état de la personne le permet, s'opposent les soins psychiatriques sans consentement.Attentatoires à la liberté individuelle et pouvant même atteindre, en cas d'hospitalisation, la liberté fondamentale d'aller et venir, le législateur a entendu réserver de tels soins sans consentement à des situations limitativement énumérées tout en encadrant strictement les modalités et en exigeant qu'ils fassent l'objet d'un contrôle du juge, obligatoire chaque fois que la liberté d'aller et venir excède une certaine durée et simplement facultatif dans les autres cas.Le présent ouvrage a pour objectif de guider le lecteur dans les méandres du dispositif actuellement en vigueur pour la mise en oeuvre des mesures de soins psychiatriques sans consentement, mais également de l'éclairer sur ce que recouvre le contrôle exercé par le juge des libertés et de la détention.
Mentally ill --- Involuntary treatment --- Internement (Psychiatrie) --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Commitment and detention --- Law and legislation --- Droit --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Human rights --- Criminal law. Criminal procedure --- Medical law --- France
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This book explores the challenges of informed consent in medical intervention and research ethics, considering the global reality of multiculturalism and religious diversity.
Informed consent (Medical law) --- Consent, Informed --- Consent to treatment --- Disclosure, Medical --- Medical disclosure --- Treatment, Consent to --- Consent (Law) --- Medical ethics --- Medical personnel --- Patient education --- Involuntary treatment --- Patient refusal of treatment --- Malpractice --- Religion and beliefs
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Involuntary treatment --- Mentally ill --- Mental health laws --- Civil rights --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Internement (Psychiatrie) --- Santé mentale --- Malades mentaux --- Droits de l'homme --- Law and legislation --- Commitment and detention --- Legal status, laws, etc --- Droit
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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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Most crimes of sexual violence are committed by people known to the victim-acquaintances and family members. Yet politicians and the media overemphasize predatory strangers when legislating against and reporting on sexual violence. In this book, Eric S. Janus goes far beyond sensational headlines to expose the reality of the laws designed to prevent sexual crimes. He shows that "sexual predator" laws, which have intense public and political support, are counterproductive.Janus contends that aggressive measures such as civil commitment and Megan's law, which are designed to restrain sex offenders before they can commit another crime, are bad policy and do little to actually reduce sexual violence. Further, these new laws make use of approaches such as preventive detention and actuarial profiling that violate important principles of liberty.Janus argues that to prevent sexual violence, policymakers must address the deep-seated societal problems that allow it to flourish. In addition to criminal sanctions, he endorses the specific efforts of some advocates, organizations, and social scientists to stop sexual violence by, for example, taking steps to change the attitudes and behaviors of school-age children and adolescents, improving public education, and promoting community treatment and supervision of previous offenders.Janus also warns that the principles underlying the predator laws may be the early harbingers of a "preventive state" in which the government casts wide nets of surveillance and intervenes to curtail liberty before crimes of any type occur. More than a critique of the status quo, this book discusses serious alternatives and how best to overcome the political obstacles to achieving rational policy.
Preventive detention --- Sex crimes --- Civil commitment of sex offenders --- Sex offenders --- Detention, Preventive --- Detention of persons --- Commitment of sex offenders --- Involuntary treatment --- Offenders, Sex --- Predators, Sexual --- Sex criminals --- Sexual offenders --- Sexual predators --- Criminals --- Legal status, laws, etc. --- Délinquants sexuels --- Internement civil des délinquants sexuels --- Crimes sexuels --- Détention provisoire --- Droit
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Pourquoi la justice pénale impose-t-elle des soins aux condamnés ? Comment ces mesures ont-elles évolué au cours des dernières décennies ? Sont-elles aujourd'hui plus fréquentes ? Ont-elles changé dans leur nature voire dans leurs finalités ? Sur quels critères s'appuient les magistrats pour en prononcer ? Comment sont-elles mises en place, contrôlées et menées à bien ? Pour répondre à ces questions, une équipe de sociologues et de juristes a mené une enquête empirique mêlant méthodes qualitatives et quantitatives. Cette recherche se fonde sur l'analyse d'un échantillon représentatif de 2 700 dossiers judiciaires étudiés dans six juridictions. Celui-ci comprend des affaires criminelles jugées par des cours d'assises et certains délits traités par des tribunaux correctionnels ou par le biais d'alternatives aux poursuites (violences conjugales, délits sexuels, infractions à la législation sur les stupéfiants). Afin de comprendre les ressorts et les difficultés de l'articulation entre peine et soin, une centaine d'entretiens semi-directifs ont été réalisés auprès de professionnels au contact de prévenus et de condamnés : magistrats, personnels de l'administration pénitentiaire et professionnels de santé
Injonction de soins. --- Soins médicaux --- Droit. --- Soins médicaux --- Personnalisation des peines. --- Injonction de soins -- France --- Criminal justice, Administration of --- Punishment --- Prisoners --- Medical care --- Justice pénale --- Peines --- Prisonniers --- Law and legislation --- Administration --- Droit --- France --- Involuntary treatment --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique)
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