A recent appeal to the Upper Tribunal has raised some
interesting issues relating to the legal concepts of “treatment in hospital”
and “liable to be detained” within the context of the Mental Health Act.
The case of SL v Ludlow Street Healthcare (Mental Health:All) [2015] UKUT 398 (AAC) (16 July 2015) concerned a patient, SL, who had
diagnoses of mild learning disability and hyperkinetic disorder, associated
with seriously irresponsible conduct, and in the past had been detained under
Sec.3 for treatment, and at other times had been on a Community Treatment
Order.
SL had more recently been detained under Sec.3, but was
actually living in a care home on extended Sec.17 leave at the time he appealed
to the Mental Health Tribunal.
Although it was established that he mainly resided in the
care home, and only actually attended hospital fortnightly for psychology
sessions, and monthly for the ward review, the Tribunal found that “it was not
the time he spent at the hospital that mattered, so much as the extent to which
his time there contributed to the decision-making of the clinical team.” He
therefore remained on Sec.3.
He appealed to the Upper Tribunal on the basis that “almost
all of the treatment that the patient received was being delivered in the
community, so he no longer justified being subject to section 3.”
The Judge in the case considered that the crucial point to
be decided was “whether it was appropriate for the patient to remain liable to be detained in hospital for
medical treatment.” He made a clear distinction between “liable to be detained”
and “detained”, as someone who is in law “liable to be detained” may not in
fact actually be in hospital.
He referred to case law from the early 2000’s, in which the
Judge did not consider there was any distinction between treatment “in” a
hospital and treatment “at” a hospital. I remember looking at this case law with
some bemusement at the time, as it did seem to me that there was a quite clear
difference. Nevertheless, the Judge was satisfied with this case law, and
applied it to the current case.
The Judge went on to consider Sec.145(c)(ii) MHA, which
gives a broad definition of “medical treatment”, including “nursing, psychological intervention and
specialist mental health habilitation, rehabilitation and care”.
Taking these factors into account the Judge concluded that SL’s Sec.17
leave in itself, as well as the rehabilitation provided in the care home,
constituted part of his treatment plan, which therefore rendered him both
“liable to be detained” and to be receiving “treatment in hospital”.
As a consequence, the appeal was dismissed.
Incidentally, this broad interpretation of “treatment in
hospital” runs counter to some parts of the new Code of Practice. In
particular, I would take issue with the case example cited in Chapter 13 CoP,
which purports to describe the interface between the MHA and the Mental
Capacity Act. While this refers to an elderly lady with dementia who lacks
capacity, some of the statements can be directly applied in the case of SL.
In the case example P is detained under Sec.3 MHA, and is
treated, but when this treatment is finished, it is considered that she no
longer needs to be in hospital, and should be placed in a care home. The CoP
then states: “P no longer needs to be
detained in hospital for care and treatment for the mental disorder. As such,
the Act is no longer available.”If this guidance were in fact true, then patients would have to be discharged from detention under Sec.3 once they were no longer considered to require treatment in hospital, and extended Sec.17 leave would not be available to the patient’s responsible clinician.
The other contentious implication of this CoP case is the idea that treatment for mental disorder could somehow magically cease. The SL case makes it very clear indeed that the bar for what constitutes “treatment” is set low, and it would be hard to argue that anyone with an ongoing mental health disorder did not require treatment. And that treatment does not even need to take place in a hospital for a patient to remain “liable to be detained”.
A lesson to be learned from this is not necessarily to believe everything you read in the Code of Practice.