Deferred discharge of unrestricted patient: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Information-header}}
A Tribunal may defer the [[Full discharge of unrestricted patient|discharge of an unrestricted patient]] to a future date (s72(3)), for example when time is needed to finalise after-care arrangements. This should not be confused with a [[deferred conditional discharge]] in restricted cases (where the deferral is not to a specified date, but is until the conditions can be satisfied). If the arrangements are a prerequisite to discharge (they are not always) and there is doubt about availability then the tribunal will adjourn instead.
A Tribunal may defer the [[Full discharge of unrestricted patient|discharge of an unrestricted patient]] to a future date (s72(3)), for example when time is needed to finalise after-care arrangements. This should not be confused with a [[deferred conditional discharge]] in restricted cases (where the deferral is not to a specified date, but is until the conditions can be satisfied). If the arrangements are a prerequisite to discharge (they are not always) and there is doubt about availability then the tribunal will adjourn instead.


[[Category:Types of discharge]]
{{Information-footer
|subcat=Types of discharge
|maincat=Glossary pages
}}

Latest revision as of 20:16, 9 April 2021

A Tribunal may defer the discharge of an unrestricted patient to a future date (s72(3)), for example when time is needed to finalise after-care arrangements. This should not be confused with a deferred conditional discharge in restricted cases (where the deferral is not to a specified date, but is until the conditions can be satisfied). If the arrangements are a prerequisite to discharge (they are not always) and there is doubt about availability then the tribunal will adjourn instead.

INFORMATION




What links here:

  • No pages link to this page