Deferred discharge: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
A Tribunal may defer the discharge | {{Information-header}} | ||
*'''Unrestricted cases''' A Tribunal may defer the discharge to a future date. See [[Deferred discharge of unrestricted patient]]. | |||
*'''Restricted cases''' A Tribunal may defer a [[conditional discharge]] until arrangements are made to its satisfaction (this is a [[deferred conditional discharge]]). An [[absolute discharge]] may not be deferred. | |||
{{Information-footer | |||
|subcat=Types of discharge | |||
|maincat=Glossary pages | |||
}} |
Latest revision as of 20:15, 9 April 2021
- Unrestricted cases A Tribunal may defer the discharge to a future date. See Deferred discharge of unrestricted patient.
- Restricted cases A Tribunal may defer a conditional discharge until arrangements are made to its satisfaction (this is a deferred conditional discharge). An absolute discharge may not be deferred.
INFORMATION
- Representation
- Civil sections and CTOs
- Criminal sections
- Aftercare
- Mental Health Tribunal
- Mandatory and discretionary references
- Nearest relative
- Legal Aid
- International law
What links here:
- No pages link to this page
The following category (in the blue box) can be clicked to view a list of other pages in the same category: