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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2020
Involuntary outpatient treatment (IOT) is a type of non-voluntary treatment applied in the community, which tries to ensure the therapeutic compliance of patients that have a severe mental illness.
In Spain, a specific legal regulation about this matter does not exist; however, it is a fact in clinical practice. The application of IOT is not without controversy, with advocates, who consider it a way of achieving therapeutic compliance, and detractors, who think it is an infringement of the fundamental rights of a person.
An evaluation of the knowledge on IOT in Spain. Analyze the four ethical principles found in this treatment.
The protection of the patient is encompassed in the principle of beneficence. And how could we combine this with the principle of autonomy? The answer should be individualized and based on a determined disorder. Starting with non-maleficence, we ask if IOT would provoke a rejection so that the patient would distance himself further from the therapeutic environment. As for the principle of justice, the high cost by patients that do not comply with the treatment would be diminished if we are able to have them follow the treatment with higher effectiveness. This would allow a greater number of patients to access these resources.
The proposal of IOT should be preceded by a deliberative process. This process should include a psychiatric diagnosis that includes not only psychiatric aspects, but psychological, familial and social as well. This would compel us to create a personalized design of the therapeutic needs of each patient.
The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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