Cry For Freedom
Cry For Freedom
Cry For Freedom
Special
Therapy
report
www.autismeye.com
www.autismeye.com
Dr Mitzi Waltz is a
senior researcher at
the Disability Studies
research organisation
in the Netherlands, a
freelance writer and
editor, and an expert
witness in autismrelated issues
Creeping concerns
There are times when a specialist,
secure medical setting is the right
place for someone with autism.
I work as an expert witness, and in
cases where a person on the
spectrum has committed a serious
crime and poses a danger to
others, the right facility can provide
a welcome, therapeutic alternative
to prison. When a person is
suicidal and other forms of help
have been tried and failed,
hospitalisation can save their life.
But once sectioning happens,
parents can lose control over the
situation and may find themselves
separated from their loved ones for
months or even years. And there
are creeping concerns that, at
times, the system seems keen to
ensure that individuals remain
Gross deficiencies
In Scotland, the pressure group
Autism Rights found that the Mental
Welfare Commission did not even
collect statistics on the number of
people with autism receiving mental
health services, much less the
appropriateness or outcome of the
services received. They needed to
file Freedom of Information
requests to force the collection of
information about deaths, injuries
and other adverse events
affecting patients with autism.
It has taken a full-time carer,
not an employee of a disability
charity or a politician, to
investigate and highlight these
gross deficiencies, says Fiona
Sinclair of Autism Rights.
Forced treatment
In England, changes are afoot,
including new policy guidance on
the use of the Mental Health Act
(see Resources, page 33).
Nevertheless, there are still many
cases, such as that of Matthew
Garnett in Northamptonshire,
where people are inappropriately
sectioned, often because local
authorities do not have the will to
commission appropriate
community-based services.
Forced treatment orders can
also cause great harm. In
Scotland, Christine McVicar went
so far as to take her adult son
Andrew to Spain for a while to try
to avoid forced drugging with
Risperidone an antipsychotic
medication that she alleges
caused her son to develop serious
health problems. Now back in
Scotland, Andrew has again
allegedly been subjected to depot
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School of Education
Therapy
Special
Therapy
report
Resources
l Autism Rights (Scotland):
www.autismrights.org.uk/drupal/
l European Convention on Human Rights:
www.echr.coe.int/Documents/Convention_
ENG.pdf
l The Law Society (2015): Deprivation of
Liberty: A Practical Guide. Online at:
www.lawsociety.org.uk/support-services/
advice/articles/deprivation-of-liberty/
l LB Bill (England):
https://lbbill.wordpress.com/
l Social Care Institute for Excellence (2015):
Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) at a
glance. Online at: www.scie.org.uk/
publications/ataglance/ataglance43.asp
l Rights in Reality blog by Steve Broach on
the Law Commission consultation on DoLS:
https://rightsinreality.wordpress.
com/2015/10/30/response-to-the-lawcommission-consultation-mental-capacityand-deprivation-of-liberty/
Its an excellent discussion, informed by the
LB Bill, of current proposals in England.
l UN Convention on the Rights of Persons
with Disabilities (UN CRPD): www.un.org/
disabilities/convention/conventionfull.shtml
l Victoria Butler-Cole (2015): The new Mental
Health Act Code of Practice.
Online at: http://network.autism.org.uk/
knowledge/policy-guidance/new-mentalhealth-act-code-practice
Its a good summary of the recent policy
changes, including a link to the full Mental
Health Act Code of Practice.
@UoBAutism
16/10/2015 11:37:02
Deprivation of liberty
Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards
(DoLs) have become a hot topic in
the past couple of years, as
landmark cases in the UK have
established that a person can be
wrongfully deprived of their liberty
in situations beyond the obvious
injustice of forced hospitalisation
for no good reason. In well-run
services and local authorities, these
developments are driving changes
to practice. They recognise that,
with the right support and advocacy
services, adults with autism or
Hospitals are
not homes, and
most support for
people with ... autism
should be provided in
a community setting
Medication cannot treat any of the
core symptoms of autism.
In the end, it is individual choice
and freedom, with full human rights
protection as afforded by the
European Convention on Human
Rights and the UN Convention on
the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities (See Resources), that is
at stake. When people with autism
have the right support and their
rights are protected, problems and
the abuses of power will be fewer,
and we will have the tools we need
to handle them.
As long as adults with autism do
not have recourse to the help and
support they need in the community,
the conditions that can result in
deprivation of liberty and harmful
forced treatment will remain.
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