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26 Stan. L. & Pol'y Rev. 159 (2015)
Involuntary Outpatient Commitment: The Limits of Prevention

handle is hein.journals/stanlp26 and id is 169 raw text is: 











             INVOLUNTARY OUTPATIENT

           COMMITMENT: THE LIMITS OF

                           PREVENTION


                           Candice T. Player*

        Preventive outpatient commitment laws require people with mental illnesses
    to participate in mental health treatment before they meet the criteria for
    inpatient civil commitment-clear and convincing evidence of mental illness and
    dangerousness to self or others. These laws apply to people who are chronically
    ill but not imminently dangerous. Most outpatient commitment laws do not
    require a judicial determination of incompetence, nor do they require a criminal
    charge or a criminal conviction. As such, outpatient commitment statutes unearth
    an  old question on law, ethics, and the limits of prevention: under what
    circumstances can we impose substantial restraints on individual liberty because
    we believe a person is likely to harm himself or others before he actually has
    done so?
        Although most authors rest the moral justification for outpatient commitment
    on  a mental  impairment-be  it impaired insight, decisional-incapacity or,
    incompetence  to refuse  treatment, this Article claims that government
    interventions into self-regarding harm and other-regarding harm require distinct
    moral justifications. When our primary concern is one of self-regarding harm, a
    court order to participate in outpatient treatment may be appropriate, but only
    for people with mental illnesses who are incompetent to make treatment decisions
    on their own. If, however, we are concerned about harm to others, a court order
    to participate in outpatient treatment may be appropriate, but only for people
    with mental illnesses who lack the moral capacities for criminal responsibility-
    either because they are unlikely to appreciate the wrongfulness of their conduct
    or because they are unable to conform their conduct to the requirements of the
    law.

INTRODUCTION              .............................................. ..... 160
I. THE  RISE OF OUTPATIENT  COMMITMENT        .......................  ...... 166
   A.  Deinstitutionalization       ................................... ..... 166
        1. The (Broken) Promise of Community   Mental Health ........  ..... 166


        * Assistant Professor of Law, Northwestern University School of Law; Ph.D. Ethics
and Health Policy, Harvard University 2013; J.D. Harvard Law School, 2009; M.Phil,
Institute of Criminology, Cambridge University, 2003 A.B. Harvard College, 2002. I am
grateful to Anita L. Allen, Anne Barnhill, Eric Beerbohm, Stephanos Bibas, Dan Brock,
Glenn Cohen, Steve Joffe, Michelle Mello, Stephen Morse, Ted Ruger, and Tobias Wolff for
their comments on this Article. All errors are my own.


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