A new
proposed bill aims to provide relief to mentally ill patients across the
country. Prepared by the law and health ministries, it will ensure that
patients are not dumped in hospitals and mental asylums for more than
six months or given electric shocks without their prior consent.
The Mental Health Care Bill, which seeks to update the country’s 25-year-old law in accordance with the United Nations’ conventions, calls for a sixmonth jail term for those found guilty of violating the new safety guidelines.
According to the latest estimates provided by the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS), Bangalore, at least two crore Indians suffer from serious mental disorders and need help. This estimate does not include age-related neurological disorders such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.
The Mental Health Care Bill, which seeks to update the country’s 25-year-old law in accordance with the United Nations’ conventions, calls for a sixmonth jail term for those found guilty of violating the new safety guidelines.
According to the latest estimates provided by the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS), Bangalore, at least two crore Indians suffer from serious mental disorders and need help. This estimate does not include age-related neurological disorders such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.
The proposed bill proposes to make it mandatory for hospital
authorities to follow an “advance directive” from mentally ill patients
or their immediate family members if the patients are not in a condition
to sign it. “Advance directive will mean conferring powers upon every
person with mental illness to let the health authorities know what kind
of treatment he/she wants and what they would like to decline during the
course of treatment,” states the proposed bill.
It also proposes to make it compulsory for the medical officer in charge of a mental health facility to prepare a special report every six months about the mental and physical condition of all patients, to ensure that no person is dumped there on the basis of old medical reports.
The health ministry also wanted to scrap the direct electro-convulsive therapy (ECT) — generally known as electric shock — used to treat patients, but the law ministry retained it, albeit with stringent guidelines regarding when it can be used
It also proposes to make it compulsory for the medical officer in charge of a mental health facility to prepare a special report every six months about the mental and physical condition of all patients, to ensure that no person is dumped there on the basis of old medical reports.
The health ministry also wanted to scrap the direct electro-convulsive therapy (ECT) — generally known as electric shock — used to treat patients, but the law ministry retained it, albeit with stringent guidelines regarding when it can be used
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