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19 Health L. Rev. 5 (2010-2011)

handle is hein.journals/hthlr19 and id is 1 raw text is: 


























Introduction
Under  Alberta's Mental Health Act, three requirements
must be satisfied before someone may be detained in a
psychiatric facility as an involuntary (formal) patient.1
The patient must be (1) suffering from a mental disorder
as defined in the Act, (2) likely to cause harm to self
or others or to  suffer substantial mental or physical
deterioration or  serious physical  impairment,  and
(3) unsuitable to be admitted to (or continue at) the
psychiatric facility other than as a formal patient.

By  comparison   with its two  neighbours,  the third
criterion has received  very  little attention - from
legislators, judges, academics, and (perhaps) even in
practice. For example, the two other criteria have been
the subject of important legislative changes over the
years. The  recent amendments   to  the Mental Health
Act have  focused attention on  the  second criterion,
and  in particular, the shift from danger to harm
and  mental or physical deterioration.2 Likewise, the
definition of the first criterion - mental disorder - was
the subject of a significant amendment when   the Act
last underwent substantial revision (in 1988), with the
previous definition - lack of reason or lack of control of
behaviour3 - being changed  to the current definition:
a substantial disorder of thought, mood, perception,
orientation or memory  that grossly impairs judgment,
behaviour, capacity to recognize reality, or ability to
meet the ordinary demands  of life.4

By contrast, the third criterion remains exactly the same
as it was when  the Mental Health Act was first enacted
in 1972 - unsuitable for admission to a facility other


than as a formal patient.5 Also, when compared to the
amount  of case-law dealing with the first two criteria,
there is very little judicial discussion of the meaning of
the third criterion.

Hence, the purpose of the present article is to discuss the
third criterion - what does it mean to be unsuitable
to be in a psychiatric facility other than as a formal
patient?



The   Unwilling Patient
As Peter Carver has pointed out,6 the underlying purpose
of the third criterion is to ensure that certification for
involuntary hospitalization occurs only in the last resort,
where  an individual cannot be admitted to a psychiatric
facility on a voluntary basis. The most obvious (and most
common)   example  of this being satisfied is where the
individual refuses to be admitted or to stay voluntarily.
By  definition such a person is unsuitable to be at the
facility other than as a formal patient. This is recognized
by case-law,7 and it is also why patients at Review Panel
hearings are typically asked what they will do if their
certificates are cancelled by the panel. A response which
indicates that the patient intends to leave the hospital if
the certificates are cancelled generally would be taken
as satisfying the third criterion for certification.'

Conversely, however,  where   the patient expresses a
willingness to remain at the hospital voluntarily, this
does not  necessarily mean  that the third criterion is
absent. The patient's statement must be assessed in all
the circumstances, including  factors such as insight,


Health   Law   Review - 19:1, 2010


5

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