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A values-based perspective on good practice in compulsion

Invited commentary on … Detained – what's my choice? Part 1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

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Abstract

We outline how the values-based approach adopted in training materials supporting the Mental Health Act 2007 for England and Wales will complement recovery-based practice in compulsory psychiatric detention.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2008 

Reference Roberts, Dorkins, Wooldridge and HewisRoberts et al's (2008, this issue) article is timely in facing up to the issues surrounding compulsion as requiring, no less than other aspects of mental health, a positive approach to good practice.

Many regard compulsion as a failure of good practice. Roberts et al make clear that this is not necessarily the case. By its nature, compulsion is more prone to misuse than most other interventions. Hence the need for safeguards. Safeguards in themselves, however, will not ensure good practice. What is needed, in addition, is the positive approach to recovery and the development of the skills of self-management for which the article so clearly argues. The training materials to support implementation of the new Mental Health Act 2007 for England and Wales are being developed in a strongly values-based context that directly complements that approach (see http://mhact.csip.org.uk).

Values-based practice is a skills-based approach to working with complex and conflicting values in health and social care (Reference FulfordFulford, 1989; Reference Woodbridge and FulfordWoodbridge & Fulford, 2004). The approach is relevant to compulsion essentially because compulsion involves a direct conflict of values between the person concerned and everyone else.

The training materials for the Mental Health Act 2007 are being set directly within a values-based approach in two ways. First, these materials, instead of being produced ‘top-down’ from the changes in the law, build on a series of case studies that are being produced by people with direct personal experience of key areas of particular difficulty in compulsion (Dora Jonathan, a lawyer from the Black and minority ethnic community with extensive experience of work on mental health tribunals, and Sarah Dewey, a service user researcher with personal experience of compulsion). This ‘bottom-up’ approach aims to build into the training materials the values and experiences of those directly concerned, as the starting point for a values-based approach to good practice in compulsion.

Second, the training materials focus particularly on the Guiding Principles that will be given in the Code of Practice (publication expected in April 2008). These are central to a values-based approach because they provide a framework of values for balanced decision-making. Thus, the law tells us ‘what to do’; the Code of Practice tells us ‘how to do it’; and the Guiding Principles, set within a values-based approach, guide us in applying the law and Code of Practice in the particular circumstances of each individual case.

Corresponding with their importance for good practice in compulsion, the Guiding Principles have a considerably enhanced status in the Mental Health Act 2007: thus, the areas that the Guiding Principles must cover (hence the values that they must embody) are given statutory force by a statement of principles in the Act; and the Guiding Principles themselves, in addition to being set out in full in Chapter 1 of the Code of Practice, will be referred to throughout the Code. We believe that this enhanced status, together with the embedding of the training materials in a strongly values-based approach, provides an opportunity to move mental health practice in compulsion firmly towards the recovery-based approach advocated by Roberts and his co-authors.

Declaration of interest

K.W.M.F and M.K. are both involved in developing the training materials to support the Mental Health Act 2007, M.K. as National Training Lead on the Implementation of the Care Services Improvement Partnership, and K.W.M.F as Special Adviser for Values-Based Practice at the Department of Health.

References

Fulford, K. W. M. (1989) Moral Theory and Medical Practice. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Roberts, G., Dorkins, E., Wooldridge, J. & Hewis, E. (2008) Detained – what's my choice? Part 1: Discussion. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 12, 172180.Google Scholar
Woodbridge, K. & Fulford, K. W. M. (2004) Whose Values? A Workbook for Values-Based Practice in Mental Health Care. Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health.Google Scholar
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