Author:
Burns Tom,Yeeles Ksenija,Molodynski Andrew,Nightingale Helen,Vazquez-Montes Maria,Sheehan Kathleen,Linsell Louise
Abstract
BackgroundCoercion has usually been equated with legal detention. Non-statutory
pressures to adhere to treatment, ‘leverage’, have been identified as
widespread in US public mental healthcare. It is not clear if this is so
outside the USA.AimsTo measure rates of different non-statutory pressures in distinct
clinical populations in England, to test their associations with patient
characteristics and compare them with US rates.MethodData were collected by a structured interview conducted by independent
researchers supplemented by data extraction from case notes.ResultsWe recruited a sample of 417 participants from four differing clinical
populations. Lifetime experience of leverage was reported in 35% of the
sample, 63% in substance misusers, 33% and 30% in the psychosis samples
and 15% in the non-psychosis sample. Leverage was associated with
repeated hospitalisations, substance misuse diagnosis and lower insight
as measured by the Insight and Treatment Attitudes Questionnaire. Housing
leverage was the most frequent form (24%). Levels were markedly lower
than those reported in the USA.ConclusionsNon-statutory pressure to adhere to treatment (leverage) is common in
English mental healthcare but has received little clinical or research
attention. Urgent attention is needed to understand its variation and
place in community practice.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
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