Abstract

Involuntary medication in psychiatric treatment of inpatients is highly controversial. While laws regulating involuntary medication have been changed in Germany, no data have been available to date on how often involuntary medication is actually applied. Recently, our hospital group introduced specific routine documentation of legal status and application of involuntary medication in the patients' electronic records, which allows the assessment of the frequency of involuntary medication. For the year 2014, we extracted aggregated data from the electronic database on age, sex, psychiatric diagnosis, legal status during admission, kind of coercive measure (mechanical restraint, seclusion, and involuntary medication) applied, and the number and duration of seclusion and restraint episodes for seven study sites. A total of 1,514 (9.6%) of 15,832 admissions were involuntary. At least one coercive measure was applied in 976 (6.2%) admissions. Seclusion was applied in 579 (3.7%) admissions, mechanical restraint was applied in 529 (3.3%) admissions, and involuntary medication was applied in 78 (0.5%) admissions. Two-thirds of involuntary medications were applied in cases of emergency; the remainder was applied after a formal decision by a judge. In 55 (70.5%) of the admissions with involuntary medication, at least one other coercive measure (seclusion, restraint, or both) was applied as well. Involuntary medication is rarely applied and less frequent than seclusion or mechanical restraint, possibly as a consequence of recent legal restrictions.

Highlights

  • The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UN-CRPD) [1] was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 2006 and has been ratified by 159 states to date [2]

  • Of the 15,832 admissions, 1,514 (9.6%) of them were involuntary: 1,026 (6.5%) of these were admitted according to mental health legislation and 488 (3.1%) were admitted according to guardianship legislation

  • In 55 (70.5%) of those admissions affected by involuntary medication at least one other coercive measure was applied as well. This is the first data on the use of coercive medication in Germany since the introduction of the legislation increased the threshold for the application of such measures in 2013

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Summary

Introduction

The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UN-CRPD) [1] was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 2006 and has been ratified by 159 states to date [2]. Article 12 states that “persons with disabilities enjoy legal capacity on an equal basis with others in all aspects of life” [1]. The Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, the body competent to monitor the implementation of the CRPD, makes. In its statement to the demands of the Committee, the German government argues that the main problems of people with disabilities concerning legal capacity are not due to laws regulating guardianship themselves but rather to their practical realization [5]. Our hospital group introduced specific routine documentation of legal status and application of involuntary medication in the patients’ electronic records, which allows the assessment of the frequency of involuntary medication

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