Sections 27-31: Consent to treatment.Overview of consent to treatment provisions in the 1983 Act
85.Part 4 of the 1983 Act deals with the medical treatment of patients, other than (for most purposes) patients subject to a community treatment order (a CTO) who have not been recalled to hospital. Treatment of such patients is generally dealt with under Part 4A. See section 32 below for an explanation of a CTO.
86.Section 57 of the 1983 Act provides that certain treatments may not be given to any patient for mental disorder (whether or not they are otherwise subject to the 1983 Act) unless the patient consents, a SOAD and two other people appointed by the Mental Health Act Commission (MHAC) have certified that the patient is capable of giving that consent (and has done so), and the SOAD has additionally certified that the treatment should be given. The treatments in question are any surgical operation for destroying brain tissue or its functioning (sometimes called “psychosurgery”) and, by virtue of regulations under subsection (1)(b) of section 57, surgical implantation of hormones for the purpose of reducing male sex drive (a procedure which is no longer used).
87.Section 58 of the 1983 Act provides that patients who are liable to be detained under the 1983 Act (subject to certain exclusions set out in section 56) may not, in general, be given certain treatments unless they consent and that consent is certified by their RMO (in future the AC in charge of the treatment) or a SOAD, or alternatively, unless a SOAD certifies that they either cannot or will not consent to the treatment, but that it should nonetheless be given. Section 34 of the 2007 Act also applies section 58 to patients who are subject to a CTO and who have been recalled to hospital (subject to certain exceptions).
88.Section 58 of the 1983 Act also applies to the administration of medication once three months have passed since the patient was first given medication while detained – or, in future, subject to a CTO – under the Act. At present and by virtue of regulations under subsection (1)(a), it also applies to electro-convulsive therapy (ECT), without any initial period however this will be overtaken by the amendments made by section 27 of the 2007 Act (see below).
89.Sections 57 and 58 are subject to the following sections of the 1983 Act:
section 59, which provides that consent or a certificate under either of those sections may relate to a plan of treatment instead of an individual treatment
section 60, which provides that a patient who withdraws consent to treatment or to all or any part of a plan of treatment, is to be treated from that point onwards as being someone who does not consent to the treatment(s) in question
section 61, which imposes requirements on RMOs (in future the AC in charge of treatment) to report to the Secretary of State (in practice MHAC) on treatment given on the basis of a SOAD certificate and permits the Secretary of State (MHAC) to withdraw such a certificate
section 62, which dis-applies sections 57 and 58 where treatment is immediately necessary and meets certain criteria, and in certain cases where the discontinuance of treatment would cause the patient serious suffering.
90.Section 63 of the 1983 Act provides that patients liable to be detained (and not excluded by section 56) may be treated by or under the direction of their RMO (in future the AC in charge of the treatment) without their consent, where the treatment concerned is not one to which sections 57 or 58 apply.
