Reducing coercion in mental healthcare

SP Sashidharan, R Mezzina, D Puras - Epidemiology and psychiatric …, 2019 - cambridge.org
AimsTo examine the extent and nature of coercive practices in mental healthcare and to
consider the ethical, human rights challenges facing the current clinical practices in this …

Preventing and reducing 'coercion'in mental health services: an international scoping review of English‐language studies

P Gooding, B McSherry, C Roper - Acta Psychiatrica …, 2020 - Wiley Online Library
This article discusses initiatives aimed at preventing and reducing 'coercive practices' in
mental health and community settings worldwide, including in hospitals in high‐income …

[HTML][HTML] An end to coercion: rights and decision-making in mental health care

K Sugiura, F Mahomed, S Saxena… - Bulletin of the World …, 2020 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
In December 2018, an independent review of the 1983 Mental Health Act of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland concluded that reforms were needed to …

Ethical challenges when using coercion in mental healthcare: a systematic literature review

MH Hem, E Gjerberg, TL Husum… - Nursing Ethics, 2018 - journals.sagepub.com
Background: To better understand the kinds of ethical challenges that emerge when using
coercion in mental healthcare, and the importance of these ethical challenges, this article …

'AI gone mental': engagement and ethics in data-driven technology for mental health

S Carr - Journal of Mental Health, 2020 - Taylor & Francis
In 2017 the tech giant IBM stated that artificial intelligence (AI) will transform the delivery of
mental health care over the next five years by helping clinicians better predict, monitor and …

Data subjects' conceptualizations of and attitudes toward automatic emotion recognition-enabled wellbeing interventions on social media

K Roemmich, N Andalibi - Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer …, 2021 - dl.acm.org
Automatic emotion recognition (ER)-enabled wellbeing interventions use ER algorithms to
infer the emotions of a data subject (ie, a person about whom data is collected or processed …

[HTML][HTML] The limits of refusal: an ethical review of solid organ transplantation and vaccine hesitancy

OS Kates, EJ Stohs, SA Pergam, RM Rakita… - American Journal of …, 2021 - Elsevier
Patients pursuing solid organ transplantation are encouraged to receive many vaccines on
an accelerated timeline. Vaccination prior to transplantation offers the best chance of …

Risk factors associated with use of coercive practices in adult mental health inpatients: A systematic review

L Beames, J Onwumere - Journal of psychiatric and mental …, 2022 - Wiley Online Library
Accessible Summary What is known on the subject? Coercive practices such as restraint
(physically holding a person) or seclusion (containing a person in locked room) are …

Experiences of shared decision making among patients with psychotic disorders in Norway: a qualitative study

EW Haugom, B Stensrud, G Beston, T Ruud… - BMC psychiatry, 2022 - Springer
Background Shared decision making (SDM) is a process where the patient and the health
professional collaborate to make decisions based on both the patient's preferences and the …

COVID-19 and the global acceleration of digital psychiatry

DJ Stein, JA Naslund, J Bantjes - The Lancet Psychiatry, 2022 - thelancet.com
One of the most remarkable impacts of COVID-19 on psychiatry is that it has accelerated the
digital progression in mental health service delivery. Digital psychiatry has been discussed …