Community Treatment Order: Difference between revisions

 
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#redirect[[Supervised Community Treatment]]
Community Treatment Orders were introduced in November 2008, by new sections [[s17A|17A]]-G being inserted into the Mental Health Act 1983 by the Mental Health Act 2007. In the Code of Practice it is called Supervised Community Treatment; in the Act those subject to CTOs are called community patients.
 
The nearest equivalent in the past was supervised discharge (after-care under supervision) under s25A-J. These provisions were repealed when CTOs were introduced. Transitional provisions provided that, during the subsequent six months, patients subject to after-care under supervision were to be assessed and the patient placed under s2, s3, guardianship, or a CTO, or discharged altogether. The relevant commencement order was [[Mental Health Act 2007 (Commencement No. 6 and After-care under Supervision: Savings, Modifications and Transitional Provisions) Order 2008]].
 
For further information on CTOs, see [[Reference Guide]] chapter 15 (Supervised Community Treatment) and Code of Practice chapters 25 (Supervised community treatment) and 28 (Guardianship, leave of absence or SCT?).
 
==Granting a CTO==
 
A CTO is an option for s3 and unrestricted criminal patients (hospital order, transfer direction, or hospital direction).
 
Longer-term leave of absence may not be granted to a patient unless the responsible clinician first considers whether the patient should be discharged on a CTO (s17(2A)). Longer-term leave is defined as more than seven consecutive days, or an extension which would make the total period more than seven consecutive days (s17(2B)).
 
The criteria of which the RC must be satisfied are found in s17A(5):
 
:<i>(a) the patient is suffering from mental disorder of a nature or degree which makes it appropriate for him to receive medical treatment;
:(b) it is necessary for his health or safety or for the protection of other persons that he should receive such treatment;
:(c) subject to his being liable to be recalled as mentioned in paragraph (d) below, such treatment can be provided without his continuing to be detained in a hospital;
:(d) it is necessary that the responsible clinician should be able to exercise the power under section 17E(1) below to recall the patient to hospital; and
:(e) appropriate medical treatment is available for him. </i>
 
An AMHP must certify in writing that he agrees the criteria are met and that it is appropriate to make the CTO (s17A(4)). The process can be seen in the relevant statutory form: [[Media:Form CTO1 section 17A - community treatment order.pdf|Form CTO1 section 17A - community treatment order]].
 
The time periods for a CTO are the same as for detention under s3. It lasts initially for a maximum of six months, but can be renewed for a further six months and thereafter can be renewed for 12-month periods (s17C, s20A(3)).
 
There are two mandatory conditions (s17B(3)):
 
:<i>(a) a condition that the patient make himself available for examination under section 20A below; and
:(b) a condition that, if it is proposed to give a certificate under Part 4A of this Act in his case, he make himself available for examination so as to enable the certificate to be given. </i>
 
The first mandatory conditions relates to renewal of the CTO; the second to assessment for a SOAD certificate.
 
Other discretionary conditions can be specified if the RC and AMHP agree that  they are necessary or appropriate for one or more of the following purposes (s17B(2)):
 
:<i>(a) ensuring that the patient receives medical treatment;
:(b) preventing risk of harm to the patient's health or safety;
:(c) protecting other persons. </i>
 
The consent to treatment provisions which apply during the CTO are found in Part 4A (s64A-K). For details, see Reference Guide chapter 17 (Medical treatment of Supervised Community Treatment patients (Part 4A)) and Code of Practice chapters 23 (Medical treatment under the Act) and 24 (Treatments subject to special rules and procedures).
 
==Recall and revocation==
 
Once a CTO is in place, the following actions can be taken:
*The patient can be ''recalled'' to hospital temporarily for assessment;
*Once recalled, the CTO can be ''revoked'', which resurrects the detention;
*Alternatively, once recalled, the patient can be ''released'' back onto the CTO;
*The patient can be ''discharged'' from the CTO at any time.
 
The RC can recall the patient if he breaches a mandatory condition (s17E(2)) or if in his opinion (s17E(1)):
 
:<i>(a) the patient requires medical treatment in hospital for his mental disorder; and
:(b) there would be a risk of harm to the health or safety of the patient or to other persons if the patient were not recalled to hospital for that purpose. </i>
 
Breach of a discretionary condition is just a factor which will be taken into account when considering the criteria above.
 
Recall permits detention in hospital for a maximum of 72 hours (s17F(6)) during which it must be decided whether to revoke the CTO or release the patient back onto the CTO.
 
The CTO can then be revoked if (a) the RC believes the s3 admission criteria are met, and (b) an AMHP agrees with that opinion and thinks revocation is appropriate (s17F(4)).
 
The underlying authority for detention lies dormant for the duration of the CTO (s17D) and is resurrected by revocation (17G). However, for calculation of renewal dates and eligibility periods, the detention is treated as having begun on the day of revocation (s17G(5)).
 
==Appeals and references==
 
A community patient can apply for a Mental Health Tribunal hearing during the first six months (s66(1)(ca)) and during each period of extension (s66(1)(fza) and (faa)). If the CTO is revoked, the patient can apply to the Tribunal during the first six months of detention (s66(1)(cb)) and during each period for which the detention is renewed (s66(1)(f)).
 
If an application is made by the patient while detained but he subsequently is placed on a CTO, the application does not lapse but Tribunal proceedings continue, and this does not affect any other entitlement to apply to the Tribunal: [[AA v Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (2009) UKUT 195 (AAC)]]. The same logic should apply in reverse, i.e. when the patient applies on the CTO but it is subsequently revoked.
 
A community patient can also appeal to the hospital managers at any time. The managers of the responsible hospital can discharge the CTO (s23(2)(c)). The "responsible hospital" is the hospital in which he was liable to be detained immediately before the community treatment order was made, subject to section 19A (Regulations as to assignment of responsibility for community patients) (s17A(7)).
 
Also under s23(2)(c) the RC can discharge at any time, as can the nearest relative, although this latter power is subject to the same dangerousness considerations as for discharge from detention (s25).
 
Automatic references must be made by the managers of the responsible hospital at certain times:
*As soon as possible after revocation of the CTO (s68(7)).
*Six months after the beginning of the s3 admission, or any immediately previous s2 admission, if there has been no Tribunal application or reference (discounting any made during the s2) (s68(2)). For details see the separate section on automatic references.
*Three years after the last consideration of the case by the Tribunal (or one year if the patient is not yet 18 years old) (s68(8)).
*There is no power to make a reference to be made when a patient subject to after-care under supervision is placed on a CTO under the transitional provisions. This point is currently the subject of an appeal to the Upper Tribunal.
*The SoS for Health has the power to refer at any time (s67).
 
[[Category:Types of discharge]]

Revision as of 15:26, 15 August 2010

Community Treatment Orders were introduced in November 2008, by new sections 17A-G being inserted into the Mental Health Act 1983 by the Mental Health Act 2007. In the Code of Practice it is called Supervised Community Treatment; in the Act those subject to CTOs are called community patients.

The nearest equivalent in the past was supervised discharge (after-care under supervision) under s25A-J. These provisions were repealed when CTOs were introduced. Transitional provisions provided that, during the subsequent six months, patients subject to after-care under supervision were to be assessed and the patient placed under s2, s3, guardianship, or a CTO, or discharged altogether. The relevant commencement order was Mental Health Act 2007 (Commencement No. 6 and After-care under Supervision: Savings, Modifications and Transitional Provisions) Order 2008.

For further information on CTOs, see Reference Guide chapter 15 (Supervised Community Treatment) and Code of Practice chapters 25 (Supervised community treatment) and 28 (Guardianship, leave of absence or SCT?).

Granting a CTO

A CTO is an option for s3 and unrestricted criminal patients (hospital order, transfer direction, or hospital direction).

Longer-term leave of absence may not be granted to a patient unless the responsible clinician first considers whether the patient should be discharged on a CTO (s17(2A)). Longer-term leave is defined as more than seven consecutive days, or an extension which would make the total period more than seven consecutive days (s17(2B)).

The criteria of which the RC must be satisfied are found in s17A(5):

(a) the patient is suffering from mental disorder of a nature or degree which makes it appropriate for him to receive medical treatment;
(b) it is necessary for his health or safety or for the protection of other persons that he should receive such treatment;
(c) subject to his being liable to be recalled as mentioned in paragraph (d) below, such treatment can be provided without his continuing to be detained in a hospital;
(d) it is necessary that the responsible clinician should be able to exercise the power under section 17E(1) below to recall the patient to hospital; and
(e) appropriate medical treatment is available for him.

An AMHP must certify in writing that he agrees the criteria are met and that it is appropriate to make the CTO (s17A(4)). The process can be seen in the relevant statutory form: Form CTO1 section 17A - community treatment order.

The time periods for a CTO are the same as for detention under s3. It lasts initially for a maximum of six months, but can be renewed for a further six months and thereafter can be renewed for 12-month periods (s17C, s20A(3)).

There are two mandatory conditions (s17B(3)):

(a) a condition that the patient make himself available for examination under section 20A below; and
(b) a condition that, if it is proposed to give a certificate under Part 4A of this Act in his case, he make himself available for examination so as to enable the certificate to be given.

The first mandatory conditions relates to renewal of the CTO; the second to assessment for a SOAD certificate.

Other discretionary conditions can be specified if the RC and AMHP agree that they are necessary or appropriate for one or more of the following purposes (s17B(2)):

(a) ensuring that the patient receives medical treatment;
(b) preventing risk of harm to the patient's health or safety;
(c) protecting other persons.

The consent to treatment provisions which apply during the CTO are found in Part 4A (s64A-K). For details, see Reference Guide chapter 17 (Medical treatment of Supervised Community Treatment patients (Part 4A)) and Code of Practice chapters 23 (Medical treatment under the Act) and 24 (Treatments subject to special rules and procedures).

Recall and revocation

Once a CTO is in place, the following actions can be taken:

  • The patient can be recalled to hospital temporarily for assessment;
  • Once recalled, the CTO can be revoked, which resurrects the detention;
  • Alternatively, once recalled, the patient can be released back onto the CTO;
  • The patient can be discharged from the CTO at any time.

The RC can recall the patient if he breaches a mandatory condition (s17E(2)) or if in his opinion (s17E(1)):

(a) the patient requires medical treatment in hospital for his mental disorder; and
(b) there would be a risk of harm to the health or safety of the patient or to other persons if the patient were not recalled to hospital for that purpose.

Breach of a discretionary condition is just a factor which will be taken into account when considering the criteria above.

Recall permits detention in hospital for a maximum of 72 hours (s17F(6)) during which it must be decided whether to revoke the CTO or release the patient back onto the CTO.

The CTO can then be revoked if (a) the RC believes the s3 admission criteria are met, and (b) an AMHP agrees with that opinion and thinks revocation is appropriate (s17F(4)).

The underlying authority for detention lies dormant for the duration of the CTO (s17D) and is resurrected by revocation (17G). However, for calculation of renewal dates and eligibility periods, the detention is treated as having begun on the day of revocation (s17G(5)).

Appeals and references

A community patient can apply for a Mental Health Tribunal hearing during the first six months (s66(1)(ca)) and during each period of extension (s66(1)(fza) and (faa)). If the CTO is revoked, the patient can apply to the Tribunal during the first six months of detention (s66(1)(cb)) and during each period for which the detention is renewed (s66(1)(f)).

If an application is made by the patient while detained but he subsequently is placed on a CTO, the application does not lapse but Tribunal proceedings continue, and this does not affect any other entitlement to apply to the Tribunal: AA v Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust [2009] UKUT 195 (AAC). The same logic should apply in reverse, i.e. when the patient applies on the CTO but it is subsequently revoked.

A community patient can also appeal to the hospital managers at any time. The managers of the responsible hospital can discharge the CTO (s23(2)(c)). The "responsible hospital" is the hospital in which he was liable to be detained immediately before the community treatment order was made, subject to section 19A (Regulations as to assignment of responsibility for community patients) (s17A(7)).

Also under s23(2)(c) the RC can discharge at any time, as can the nearest relative, although this latter power is subject to the same dangerousness considerations as for discharge from detention (s25).

Automatic references must be made by the managers of the responsible hospital at certain times:

  • As soon as possible after revocation of the CTO (s68(7)).
  • Six months after the beginning of the s3 admission, or any immediately previous s2 admission, if there has been no Tribunal application or reference (discounting any made during the s2) (s68(2)). For details see the separate section on automatic references.
  • Three years after the last consideration of the case by the Tribunal (or one year if the patient is not yet 18 years old) (s68(8)).
  • There is no power to make a reference to be made when a patient subject to after-care under supervision is placed on a CTO under the transitional provisions. This point is currently the subject of an appeal to the Upper Tribunal.
  • The SoS for Health has the power to refer at any time (s67).