Abstract

Involuntary treatment orders (ITOs) represent coercive leverage for treatment adherence against the will of individuals incapable of providing consent. ITOs have failed to demonstrate benefits in quantitative studies, but little attention has been paid the growing body of qualitative evidence on ITOs. The current study is an interpretative meta-synthesis designed to integrate qualitative evidence and enhance our understanding of stakeholders’ perspectives (service users, relatives, professionals, psychiatrists) of ITOs in the context of mental health care. Forty-four studies met the following inclusion criteria, peer-reviewed empirical qualitative studies, and focus on perspectives and experiences of ITOs in a mental health context. Themes resulting from the analysis are: an ITO as leverage to manage compliance and risk; legal concerns; learning to play the game; building a therapeutic relationship in a coercive context; positive and negative impacts of ITOs; family involvement; and discharge. Based on these themes, an exploratory model of ITOs is proposed.

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