DECEMBER
2003
Someone I Care About Needs
Help: What Should I Do?
Guide to Voluntary & Involuntary Treatment
NAMI of Greater Chicago strongly recommends that
persons suffering from serious mental illness complete an advanced directive
called the Declaration for Mental Health Treatment which provides
guidance to their family and friends and the treatment professions regarding
treatment in the event that the person lacks the capacity to consent to mental
health treatment. Forms are available by
calling NAMI of Greater Chicago at (312) 563-0445.
ACCESSING
VOLUNTARY TREATMENT
Who provides mental health services?
Private therapists, community mental health agencies,
private and public hospitals, and state-operated mental health centers offer
mental health services.
If a person is willing to seek mental health
services, how does he/she go about it?
Outpatient mental health services from a private
therapist or community mental health agency are usually scheduled in
advance. Call the therapist or agency for
an appointment. Your local NAMI chapter
can provide you with names and phone numbers for mental health service
providers. In the Chicago area, Call
NAMI of Greater Chicago at (312) 563-0445.
When your friend or family member is being treated by
a doctor or at a community mental health agency program, and you believe that
the person’s condition is deteriorating, contact the doctor or therapists to
discuss your concerns. If necessary, the
treating therapists should assist you in initiating the process to have the
person evaluated for inpatient admission.
If the person needs hospitalization and is willing?
Inpatient mental health services are available at
private hospitals and at state-operated mental health centers. A visit to the Emergency Room of a private
hospital, or the Central Intake of a state operated mental health center will
result in an evaluation by a staff physician who can approve an admission. Whenever possible, call ahead to determine
that the hospital has a psychiatric unit, or in the case of state operated
mental health center that it is the correct facility serving the person’s home
address.
After an
evaluation at a hospital or state operated psychiatric facility, and a doctor’s
determination that the person needs inpatient admission, if the person is
willing to sign in as a voluntary patient, the person is admitted. (This is the most common and usual
procedure).
If
a person is not willing to seek mental health services – continue to
read the next section…
ACCESSING
INVOLUNTARY TREATMENT
IN A SERIOUS EMERGENCY - Call 911.
If there is an immediate threat of harm either
to the person in need of mental health services or to anyone else - call 911 to summon emergency police
assistance. Whenever possible, warn the
responding police that the person in need of assistance is in need of medical
attention for a mental illness and that police assistance is needed to transport the individual to a mental
health treatment hospital or facility.
When the police are summoned via a 911 call, they will use their
discretion to decide whether the individual needs to go a hospital, or to jail,
and they have the option to do nothing.
Ideally, family members or friends will be able to influence the decision
in the direction of seeking medical treatment rather than incarceration, but
sadly, this is not always possible.
IN A POTENTIALLY SERIOUS SITUATION -
File a Petition at a States Attorney’s Office
To File a Petition, contact your local States Attorney’s
office (in Cook County call 312-603-8600).
Anyone over the age of eighteen
can complete a petition asserting another person needs mental health
services. This can be a family member, a
friend, a neighbor or anyone else.
The
petition should state that the person is mentally ill and because of that
mental illness is:
(a) reasonably expected to inflict serious physical
harm on her/himself in the near future, or;
(b) exhibiting threatening behavior that places
another individual in reasonable expectation of being harmed in the near future,
or;
(c) unable to provide for her/his basic physical needs
so as to guard her/himself from serious harm, or a person who cannot guard
himself from serious harm “without the assistance of family or outside help”
(latter rev. 8/03), or;
(d) there is evidence of the person’s repeated past
pattern of specific behavior and actions related to the person’s illness which
warrants an involuntary admission
The petition should list descriptions of behavior
including time and place, the name address and phone number of any witness(es)
to these acts, the relationship of the person to the person being considered
for treatment, and names and addresses of spouse, parent, guardian, close
relative, or any known friend of the person being considered for treatment.
After
the States Attorney accepts a petition, they issue a WRIT for PSYCHIATRIC
EVALUATION. This Writ for Psychiatric
Evaluation orders the police to pick up the person in need of treatment and to
transport them immediately to a hospital for a psychiatric evaluation. (This method eliminates the possibility that
the police could decide either to do
nothing and/or to take the person to jail).
If the States Attorney is unwilling to file the petition, you can hire a private attorney to do so.
At the hospital,
the person will be evaluated by a physician, and if the physician recommends
hospitalization, the person may be given the option to sign into the hospital
as a voluntary patient, or the doctor will complete a FIRST CERTIFICATE, which
will hold the person in the hospital for up to 24 hours, stating that the
person is subject to an involuntary admission.
Within these 24 hours, the individual must be examined by another
physician, and if this physician agrees that this person needs to be held in
the hospital whether or not the person agrees, a SECOND CERTIFICATE will be
completed and the process of Court Review by a Judge will be initiated.
What happens at a Court Hearing for Involuntary
Admission?
The court hearing takes place about five days after
the petition and both certificates are filed with the court in the person’s
county. At the court hearing, the
patient will be represented by an attorney (either a private attorney or a
court-appointed attorney), and the petitioner is represented by the States Attorney. Each attorney presents his case to the judge,
calling witnesses to testify to the facts in the matter. The States Attorney will be attempting to
persuade the court that the person is mentally ill, is in need of treatment for
this mental illness because his/her condition is deteriorating and either has
already, or is likely to result in harm to the person or to others, and/or that
the person cannot provide for their basic physical needs to guard against
serious harm. The court-appointed lawyer’s
task is to protect the rights of the person being subjected to an involuntary
admission, to guard against the possibility that persons could be wrongfully
deprived of their liberty.
If the court rules that the person is subject to an
involuntary admission, the person is then committed to a treatment program.
COURT ORDERED TREATMENT
Court ordered treatment is called COMMITMENT. The person is then said to be “committed” to
treatment. In reality, the court order
holds both the committed person and the treating professionals responsible for
following through with the order for treatment and for accounting to the court
for their actions during the period of the commitment.
How long does the commitment last?
The court order for commitment is effective for a maximum
of 90 days, but the court may specify a shorter time. The court order may be extended for an
additional 90 days at the request of the facility or program director who must
give the court clear indications of the need to extend the commitment.
If the facility or program director determines that a
person no longer needs to be committed, they may release them before the
expiration of the court order.
Does the person have to be committed to a hospital?
No, a person can be committed to a community mental
health program as an outpatient, or even into another person’s care
instead. The court will require proof
that the community program will accept responsibility for the person and may
require detailed plans for treatment.
Does commitment mean that a person will be forced to
take medication?
No, people who have been committed retain their right
to refuse treatment.
Under what circumstances can someone be medicated
against their will?
In an emergency to prevent a person from causing
serious and imminent harm to her/himself or others, a
person may be medicated without a court hearing.
Following a court hearing, a person (whether
in-patient or outpatient) can be medicated if s/he meets all of the following
criteria: (a) the person has a serious mental illness; (b) the person’s ability
to function is deteriorating or s/he is suffering or exhibiting threatening
behavior; (c) the benefits of treatment outweigh the harm; (d) the person lacks
the capacity to make a reasoned decision about the treatment; and (e) less
restrictive services have been found inappropriate.
For persons
who are hospitalized, this bill amends the conditions under which involuntary
medication or other treatment can be authorized to include “current”
deterioration “as compared to the recipient’s ability to function prior to the
current onset of symptoms of the mental illness or disability for which
treatment is presently sought.”
If someone can be committed so they can’t harm anyone
in the near future, why can’t they be forced to take medication for the same
reason?
The difference is the immediacy of the danger. The commitment standard requires a reasonable
expectation that harm will occur in the near future. The standard for overriding an objection to
medication is to prevent harm from occurring now.
Does someone have to be hurt before a person can be
committed or forced to take medication?
No, the court is not required to wait until the person
injures himself or someone else before ordering commitment, or ordering the
person to take medication over their objection.
For
additional information, CALL: (312) 563-0445
The Alliance for the Mentally Ill
NAMI of Greater Chicago
1536 West Chicago Avenue, Chicago, IL 60622