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뉴욕 주 사법입원 및 외래치료 지원제도에 대한 고찰open accessReview of Court-Ordered Treatment in New York State

Other Titles
Review of Court-Ordered Treatment in New York State
Authors
박지웅최준호최영민손보경
Issue Date
Nov-2020
Publisher
대한신경정신의학회
Keywords
Mentally Ill patients; Involuntary treatment; Forensic psychiatry; 정신질환자; 비자의치료; 법정신의학
Citation
JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN NEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION, v.59, no.4, pp.293 - 302
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN NEUROPSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION
Volume
59
Number
4
Start Page
293
End Page
302
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/144374
DOI
10.4306/jknpa.2020.59.4.293
ISSN
1015-4817
Abstract
In recent decades, laws for involuntary treatment have evolved in ways that protect human rights as well as public safety. Globally, many nations have legislation for psychiatric patients that provide procedural advocacy during their involuntary treatment while a court or another independent organization reviews its lawfulness. In contrast, people with severe mental illness in Korea risk encountering human rights violations and loss of timely treatment, because their involuntary admissions are primarily initiated by family members and civil doctors and not by courts or government. The Mental Health Promotion and Welfare Act, revised in 2016, does not address this fundamental weakness, instead restricting involuntary admission criteria and bypassing the implementation of any procedural assistance programs. Subsequently untreated patients lead to clinical aggravation and even serious felony offenses. This paper introduces New York State's court-ordered treatment system via the Mental Hygiene Law as a model for the revision of Korean legislation. The findings show that involuntary admissions in New York State are initiated by many parties as well as familial relatives and may be held up to 60 days without any court order. However, patients are assigned legal counsel for the ability to request for a court hearing at any time during their admission. The Assisted Outpatient Program is another legal intervention that requires a person with a mental illness that would likely result in serious harm to self or others to receive supervised outpatient treatment. We argue that the New York State model can be implemented effectively in Korea considering its current medical and judicial status.
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서울 의과대학 > 서울 정신건강의학교실 > 1. Journal Articles

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