Section 136 is the only section of the Mental Health Act
that does not, at least initially, involve a doctor or an AMHP. It gives a
police officer the power the remove someone they believe may be suffering from
mental disorder to a place of safety. The purpose of this is explicitly to facilitate
the formal assessment of the person by a doctor and an AMHP.
This is how it is currently, and is very familiar to the
police and AMHPs.
The official figures for use of section 136 in the year
ending April 2020 is 18,665, although the data is incomplete, so it is likely
to be higher. This means that on average the power is used over 50 times a day.
You might think that this section was drafted to reflect
modern day policing, but in fact Section 136 has a very long history, with
origins in Victorian responses to mental illness and poverty.
The Lunatic Asylums Act 1853, for instance, has a section
68. This states:
Every Constable of any Parish or Place...who shall have
knowledge that any Person wandering at large within such Parish or Place.… is
deemed to be a Lunatic, shall immediately apprehend and take or cause such
person to be apprehended and taken before a Justice.
The Lunacy Act 1890 contains similar wording:
Every constable who shall have knowledge that any person
wandering at large is deemed to be a lunatic shall immediately apprehend and
take or cause such person to be apprehended and taken before a justice.
This remained pretty much the position with regard to
dealing with mentally disordered people in public places until the Mental
Health Act 1959.
Since the 1890 Lunacy Act, there had been a revolution in
the care and treatment of people with mental disorders. The responsibility for
assessment was removed from the judiciary and a more humanitarian approach was
taken, which involved assessment by a Mental Welfare Officer, who was the
forerunner to the Approved Mental Health Professional.
Section 136 of the 1959 Mental Health Act now stated:
If a constable finds in a place to which the public have
access a person who appears to him to be suffering from mental disorder and to
be in immediate need of care or control, the constable may, if he thinks it
necessary to do so in the interests of that person or for the protection of
other persons, remove that person to a place of safety.
Interestingly, the Mental Health Act 1983 left the
wording entirely unchanged. In fact, curiously, although the sections relating
to detention all changed – for example, section 25 of the 1959 Act relating to
compulsory assessment in hospital became section 2, and section 26 relating to
compulsory treatment in hospital became section 3, section 136 remained the
same.
There was a widespread belief among Approved Social
Workers, as Mental Welfare Officers became, that this was because the police
would not be able to remember a new section number, but I am sure this is
untrue.
The Mental Health Act 2007, which amended the 1983 Act
and replaced approved Social Workers with Approved Mental Health Professionals,
did not address section 136.
It wasn’t until the Policing and Crime Act amended
section 136 in December 2017 that there was any further change to the wording.
At first glance, the wording does not appear greatly different.
Section 136(1) now reads:
If a person appears to a constable to be suffering from
mental disorder and to be in immediate need of care or control, the constable
may, if he thinks it necessary to do so in the interests of that person or for
the protection of other persons... remove the person to a place of safety.
In fact, there was a crucial change to the police power,
as, after more than 150 years, there was no longer a requirement that the
mentally disordered person had to be in “a place to which the public have
access”. Section 136(1A) now says that the power may be exercised “at any
place” other than the person’s own home and private property.
The other major change to section 136 was, of course, reducing the length of time that detention in a place of safety for assessment could last. Since 1959, the maximum time was 72 hours; now, reflecting changes in attitudes towards the human rights of mentally disordered people, the maximum length of time has been reduced to 24 hours.
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