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Mental Health Legislation

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Mental Health Legislation - Act Right Now!

  • Mental Healthcare Act (MHCA) 2017: Landmark legislation, replaced MHA 1987.
    • Focus: Rights-based, patient-centric care, moving from custodial approach.
    • Introduced: Advance Directive (AD), Nominated Representative (NR).
    • Section 115 MHCA decriminalized suicide attempts, but BNS 2023 Section 224 has re-criminalized suicide attempts.
    • Established: Mental Health Review Boards (MHRB) for oversight and grievance redressal.
    • ECT: Unmodified ECT prohibited; for minors, MHRB approval mandatory.
    • Promotes: Community-based treatment, rehabilitation, reduced stigma.

⭐ MHCA 2017 mandates government to provide access to mental healthcare for all.

Mental Health Legislation - Patient Power Play

  • Mental Illness (MHCA 2017): Significant disorder of thought, mood, perception, orientation, or memory. Excludes intellectual disability.
  • Capacity: Assumed. Ability to understand treatment information & consequences.
  • Advance Directive (AD): Patient's written instructions for future care if capacity lost. Usually binding.
  • Nominated Representative (NR): Appointed by patient (or others if incapable/minor) for support & decisions.
  • Key Patient Rights (MHCA 2017):
    • Access care, community living, info, confidentiality.
    • Protection from cruel treatment; equality.
    • Legal aid; make complaints.
    • ECT with anaesthesia; modified for minors (MHRB approval).
    • Psychosurgery: MHRB approval.

MHCA 2017, Sec 115: Decriminalizes suicide attempt (presumes severe stress), overriding BNS Sec 106.

Evolution of Mental Health Legislation in India

Mental Health Legislation - Gateways & Careways

MHCA 2017 outlines gateways for care (admission types) and careways (treatment standards), emphasizing patient rights.

⭐ ECT for minors: Generally prohibited (MHCA 2017, Sec 97). Permissible exceptionally with guardian's informed consent & MHRB approval.

Mental Health Legislation - The Watchful Guardians

  • Mental Healthcare Act, 2017 (MHCA) replaced the Mental Health Act, 1987, establishing key regulatory & support structures, though implementation faces challenges due to resource constraints and insufficient community-based care.

  • Central Mental Health Authority (CMHA):

    • Apex national body.
    • Develops standards, policies; advises government.
    • Oversees registration of large mental health establishments.
  • State Mental Health Authority (SMHA):

    • State-level implementation & supervision.
    • Registers mental health establishments & professionals.
    • Supervises Mental Health Review Boards (MHRBs).
  • Mental Health Review Boards (MHRB):

    • District-level quasi-judicial bodies with enforcement powers.
    • Protect rights of Persons with Mental Illness (PMI); impose penalties up to ₹5 lakh for violations.
    • Review admissions (supported/involuntary), leave, discharge applications; decide grievances against medical officers.

Timeline of Mental Health Policy in India (1946-2020)

Right to free legal services under Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 must be informed by magistrates/police. Patient information can be shared for public safety (Section 23(2)(c),(g)) when absconded patients pose serious risk, ensuring balanced protection and safety measures.

Mental Health Legislation - Stress Not Crime

  • Mental Healthcare Act (MHCA) 2017: Paradigm shift.
  • Key: Section 115 - Decriminalization of suicide attempt.
    • Person attempting suicide presumed to have severe stress.
    • Shall not be punished (former IPC Section 309 now repealed under BNS 2023).
  • Mandate: Provide care, treatment, rehabilitation.
  • MHCA 2017 prevails with BNS 2023 framework supporting decriminalization.

    ⭐ Sec 115 MHCA 2017: Suicide attempter presumed under severe stress; not criminalized under BNS 2023.

  • 📌 Principle: Treat stress, not as crime.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • The Mental Healthcare Act (MHCA) 2017 replaced the MHA 1987, prioritizing patient rights.
  • Attempted suicide is decriminalized (presumption of severe stress) under MHCA 2017.
  • Advance Directives allow individuals to pre-specify treatment preferences and nominate representatives.
  • Mental Health Review Boards (MHRB) are quasi-judicial bodies for rights protection.
  • ECT is prohibited for minors; for adults, it requires anesthesia and muscle relaxants.
  • Supported admission requires consent; independent admission is voluntary.
  • Emphasis on least restrictive environment and community-based care under the new Act.

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