Police have historically been responsible for transporting people during a mental health crisis in Australia. A major change to the New South Wales (NSW) Mental Health Act (MHA) in 2007 expanded the range of coercive transportation agencies to include NSW Ambulance (paramedics) and NSW Health (mental health nurses). Anecdotal reports, however, describe a lack of clarity around how these changes should be implemented in practice. This research aims to explore this lack of clarity through qualitative analysis of interviews with people with the lived experience of involuntary transport under the MHA. Sixteen interviews were conducted; most (n = 14) interviews in northern NSW regions: six with people who had been transported (consumers), four with carers, and six with service providers (two police, one paramedic, and three mental health nurses). For consumers and carers, the police response was often perceived as too intense, particularly if the person was not violent. Carers were often conflicted by having to call for emergency intervention. Service providers were frustrated by a lack of a coordinated interagency response, resourcing issues, delays at emergency departments, and lack of adequate training. A central theme across all groups was the importance of communication styles. As one participant (consumer) said: 'Everybody needs a lesson in kindness'. All groups agreed that high-risk situations necessitate police involvement. However, invocation of the MHA during a high-risk situation is fraught with stress and difficulties, leaving little room for empathetic communications. Effective and diverse, evidence-based, early intervention strategies - both consensual and non-consensual - are necessary to reduce the requirement for police involvement in mental health transports.
Journal article
Lived experience of involuntary transport under mental health legislation
International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, Vol.26(6), pp.580-592
2017
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Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Lived experience of involuntary transport under mental health legislation
- Creators
- Joanne Bradbury - Southern Cross UniversityMarie Hutchinson - Southern Cross UniversityJohn Hurley - Southern Cross UniversityHelen Stasa - University of Sydney
- Publication Details
- International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, Vol.26(6), pp.580-592
- Identifiers
- 3349; 991012821078202368
- Academic Unit
- School of Health and Human Sciences; Nursing; Faculty of Health; Human Sciences
- Resource Type
- Journal article