Transcript Slide 1

The Mental Capacity Act 2005
Practitioner Level
Including
Housekeeping
Toilets
Fire Procedure
Breaks
Including
Mobile Phones /
Devices
Smoking
Finishing
Time
Training Transfer
Getting learning into practice
• “50% of learning fails to transfer to the
workplace”
(Sak, 2002)
Including
• “The ultimate test of effective training
is whether it benefits service users”
(Horwath and Morrison, 1999)
Training Transfer
Individual
Characteristics
Workplace
Factors
Including
Training
Design and
Delivery
Introductions
• Name
• Place and nature of work
• What do you want to get out of today’s session?
Including
Outcomes
• Undertake mental capacity assessments in
relation to high risk, complex or safeguarding
situations
• Balance risk and rights where unwise decisions
may be being made
• Know when to involve others e.g. Independent
Mental Capacity Advocate, Court of Protection,
Office of the Public Guardian, Safeguarding &
Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards Teams
• Know where to go for information and advice
Including
Ground Rules
Including
Safeguarding is a dynamic world and we
continue to learn about how to prevent
people from being harmed on both a
strategic / organisational level and as
individual practitioners.
Safeguarding is about partnership, it is not
about blame. All agencies and individuals
need to take responsibility, to reflect and
learn to safeguard people who may be
vulnerable.
Ground Rules
Confidentiality within the group will be
respected but may need to be broken if a
disclosure of unsafe practice, abuse or
neglect is made during the course – this
will usually be discussed with you first.
Including
What is Duty of Care?
Including
What is ‘Duty of Care’?
• Landmark Scottish case in 1932
established the original ‘duty of care’
principle
“...you must take reasonable care to avoid
acts or omissions which you can
reasonably foresee would be likely to
injure your neighbour.”
Including
(Lord Atkins, p580, Donaghue v Stevenson,1932)
Organisational v Individual Risk
Health & Safety at Work Act (1974):
Organisation has responsibilities towards staff, visitors and
service users in relation to equipment, hazardous
substances, buildings and procedures and practices.
Including
Mental Capacity Act (2005):
Organisation has a responsibility to:
• assess a service user’s capacity to make decisions (i.e.
to understand the risks and benefits of their choices)
• support them to make those decisions and manage
those risks
• make best interest decisions to protect those who lack
capacity to understand or manage those risks
Duty of Care means.....
• All reasonable steps have been taken
• Reliable assessment methods have been
employed using information which has been
proactively gathered and methodically analysed
• Decisions have been recorded and acted upon
• Adherence to agency policy and procedures is
evident
Kemshall, 2003
Including
Protection from Liability (Section 5)
If a person has capacity to understand the risks they are
taking, this is their decision and their risk – you will be
protected from liability if you have done all you
reasonably can to support them with understanding and
managing those risks – even if the person comes to
harm.
If you make a best interest decision for a person lacking
capacity, the Mental Capacity Act protects you from
liability if you reasonably believed that you were acting in
the person’s best interests - even if the person comes to
harm.
Including
Good record keeping is essential.
Record keeping
Recording needs to be proportionate to the situation
Day to day decisions / choices and complex, high risk
decisions will require a slightly different approach
All assessments of capacity must be recorded where the
person is making an ‘unwise decision’ or there is risk of
harm.
A formal record of the assessment should be made where
there is risk of significant harm or there is disagreement
about a person’s capacity to make a decision.
Including
Scope of the Act
Any person (paid or
voluntary) who ‘has
care of’ a person who
may lack the ability/capacity
to make some decisions
has a duty to follow the
Code of Practice that
accompanies this Act.
Including
“Capacity…
…refers to our ability to make competent
decisions determining our life choices.
It is based on the assumption that the State
does not seek to intervene unnecessarily in the
life of its citizens and will therefore not interfere
with the choices anyone makes, provided that
they are lawful choices. In other words, by and
large, provided you do not choose to break any
laws, the State will not assume any authority to
take control of the decisions you make, no
matter how unwise they may seem to others.”
Including
Hothersall, Maas-Lowit and Golighley, 2008
The MCA “Process”
Is there a concern about a persons capacity ?
(with regard to a specific decision)
Undertake a Capacity Assessment
Or
Their own decision
(even if we think it is unwise)
Including
Best Interest
• Principle 1: A person must be assumed
to have capacity unless it is established
that they lack capacity.
• Principle 2: Individuals must be
supported to make their own decisions
• Principle 3: People have the right to
make what others might regard as an
unwise or eccentric decision
Including
Who Undertakes Assessments?
All staff and carers must undertake mental
capacity assessments appropriate to their
role. It will depend on the decision.
So in the case of medical treatment it is
the doctor,
If nursing care, it is the nurse,
If day to day care, it is the care giver
If a social care decision, it is the social
care professional etc
Including
Assessing Capacity
• Can the person understand the information
relevant to the decision to be made?
• Can the person remember the information
at the time the decision needs to be made?
• Can the person use or weigh up the
information in order to make the decision?
• Can the person communicate their
decision (by talking or any other means)?
Including
Assessing Capacity
If the answer to all of these four
questions is yes then the person is
deemed to have the capacity to
make the decision in question.
If the answer to any of these four
questions is no then the person is
deemed to lack the capacity to
make the decision in question.
Understand
Retain
Weigh up
Communicate
If the person has capacity, they
have the right to choose what will
happen.
Including
If the person doesn’t have capacity,
ensure that the best interest decision
making process is followed. Continue
to involve the person as much as is
possible.
Case Study - Sharon
Including
Planning your assessment
• What concerns has Sharon’s mother
raised?
• What is the specific decision to be taken?
• What could you do to ensure Sharon is
given every opportunity to make her own
decisions?
Including
Planning Your Assessment
What is the ‘relevant information’
when assessing whether a person
has capacity to decide where they
will live?
Including
Your Role
What issues commonly arise in
relation to assessing capacity in
your work?
Including
Planning Your Assessment
How will you assess whether someone is
able to:
• Understand the information?
• Retain the information long enough to use it to
make an effective decision (i.e. now or at the
time it needs to be made)?
• Use or weigh the information as part of the
decision making process?
• Communicate her decision?
Including
“Experience…
…is the name everyone gives to their
mistakes.”
Oscar Wilde, 1854-1900
Including
The Next Step
When you meet with Sharon she’s really
positive and seems very happy. She’s keen
to tell you that she and Steven – the man
with the black hat - are going to go to the
‘next step’.
What do you need to establish?
What does the legal framework state about
capacity to enter into sexual relationships?
Including
Capacity to Consent to Sex
(in general)
Low level of capacity needed:
• Mechanics of the act
• Whether to give or withhold consent
• Health risks - STIs
• Pregnancy
Including
Capacity to Consent to a Relationship
(with a specific person)
What specific issues are there?
– How old is the person?
– Is the person a care worker?
– Does the person believe the person is
someone else?
– Is the person a known sexual or violent
offender or a perpetrator of domestic
abuse?
Including
Is It Sharon's Choice?
When you next meet Sharon her mood
seems to have changed and she’s not as
engaged with you. Eventually she tells you
that Steven is pressurising her to have sex
with him.
What do you need to establish?
Including
Consent is based on choice. Consent is
active not passive. Consent is possible
only when there is equal power. Forcing
someone to give in is not consent. Going
along with something because of wanting
to fit in with group is not consent ..... If you
can’t say ‘no’ comfortably then ‘yes’ has
no meaning. If you are unwilling to accept
‘no’ then’ yes’ has no meaning.
Adamas and Fay (1984)
Including
‘Unwise’ decisions
• Ensure capacity is properly assessed and
recorded – is specialist input required?
• Review capacity assessment if more
evidence comes to light
• Ensure any remaining risks and options are
clearly communicated to the person (in
writing) and their reactions to these recorded
• Inform them of the open door policy
Including
‘Unwise’ decisions
• Get support: Manager/Multi-agency approach
• Put safeguards in place: What can you do legally
to monitor the situation/reduce the risks?
• Seek advice: Safeguarding/MCA/Legal team
• Consider Safeguarding Threshold for Self
Neglect
• Court of Protection welfare application to review
capacity?
• Inherent Jurisdiction of the High Court?
Including
Best Interest Decisions
Imagine Sharon lacks capacity to make a
decision about where to live.
When deciding what is in her best interests:
• Who will you consult with?
• What will you consider?
Including
Best Interest Checklist
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Including
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Assess whether the person will regain capacity
Encourage participation
Identify all relevant circumstances
Find out the person’s views (past and present
wishes, feelings, values and beliefs; including
any advance decisions to refuse treatment)
Consult others (is IMCA required?)
Avoid discrimination
Avoid restricting rights
Don’t be motivated by a desire to bring about the
person’s death
Summary
• A person centred risk assessment will focus on the
outcomes the person wishes to achieve – what might be
done to help and what obstacles may be removed
• You are not responsible for other people’s decisions but
you must show what you did to alert a person to the
dangers they face and what you did to assist them to
manage them
• A capacity assessment may need to be undertaken to
ascertain a person’s ability to understand and manage
those risks
• If a person lacks capacity to make a particular decision,
a decision will need to be made in their best interest
• When making decisions for others you must be able to
show what you did and why you did it
Including
Helpful Tool
www. ehealthtracker.co.uk
Including
Any Questions?
Including
Evaluation forms
Including