Transcript Slide 1

Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards
MQNF Events 2014
Aims of this workshop:
• To confirm what we already know and what
remains unchanged
• To inform on the Supreme Court judgement
made in March 2014
• To consider the impact of this judgement on
Providers
• To advise of the impact of this judgement on
the Local Authority
The Mental Capacity Act 2005
These principles underpin and
support the best interests of the individual
and prevent abuse of decision making power
A personA must
person
beis not
A person
to be is not to
Before
making
Anything
done
for
assumedtreated
to have
as unable
be treated
to
as
the
decision,
or
on
behalf
of
the
capacity unless
makeitaisdecision
unable to make a
other
less
person
must
be
in
established
unless
thatall
hepracticable
decision merely
restrictive
his
best
interests
lacks capacity
steps to helpbecause
him do he makes
options should
so have been
an taken
unwise decision
be considered
Best Practice
• Clear recording that demonstrates
assessment of capacity to make a specific
decision
• Day to day assessment may involve
relatively informal decisions but must be
written down to show application of core
principles
Best Interest
Decision Making
• Principle 4
• ‘ If a person has been assessed as
lacking capacity then any action taken,
or any decision made for or on behalf
of that person, must be made in his or
her best interests’
Section 5 of the Act….
…allows necessary caring acts or treatment to be
carried out ….with protection from liability…..with
no need to get formal authority to act
Section 6 of the Act….
…imposes some important limitations on
acts……..key areas where practice may be
unlawful….inappropriate use of
restraint….depriving a person of their liberty
RestraintLawful under section 6 of the MCA if:
• Necessary to prevent harm to the person
• Proportionate to the likelihood and seriousness of the
harm
• In line with the rest of the Act restraint must be in the
person’s best interests and a less restrictive alternative
considered
• Careful consideration needs to be given to whether
restrictions placed on a person go beyond restraint and
actually deprive them of liberty and, if so, whether those
restrictions are genuinely necessary.
Two cases taken to the Supreme Court, to determine the
correct approach to determining whether a person is
deprived of his liberty
Supreme Court Judgement…
Two key questions to ask…( the ‘acid test’)
Is the person subject to continuous supervision and
control? And is not free to leave?
All four elements must be satisfied i.e.
1. Continuous
2. Supervision
3. Control
4. Not free to leave
NB. Compliance, lack of objection, reason or purpose
are NOT relevant
The intention of the Supreme Court is to extend the
safeguard of independent scrutiny
Separate the Question…
• Whether the restrictions amount to a deprivation
of liberty from
• Whether staff actions are necessary, proportionate
and in the persons best interest
*The former determines whether the situation
must be assessed independently*
‘ ….it is no criticism of health and social
care bodies, if the safeguards are required.
It is merely a recognition that human rights
are for everyone, including the most
disabled…. Disabled members of the
community have the same right to liberty
as has everyone else’
Lady Hale. 19th March 2014
Implications for Providers
• Reviews of care planning and delivery
• Staffing training needs analysis…review
understanding of Best Interests and least
restrictive measures
• Seek authorisations to deprive service users
of their liberty
• Better understanding of the process, the
documentation and evidence of good
practice
Implications for Local Authorities
• Significant increase in applications
• Extensions
• Seeking guidance from the Court of
Protection
• Increasing resources
Your Questions