About the journal

Cobiss

Srpski arhiv za celokupno lekarstvo 2009 Volume 137, Issue 5-6, Pages: 292-297
https://doi.org/10.2298/SARH0906292J
Full text ( 621 KB)
Cited by


Medicolegal aspects of hospital treatment of violent mentally ill persons

Jovanović Aleksandar (Institut za psihijatriju, Klinički centar Srbije, Beograd)
Jašović-Gašić Miroslava (Institut za psihijatriju, Klinički centar Srbije, Beograd)
Lečić-Toševski Dušica (Institut za mentalno zdravlje, Beograd)

Introduction. This paper deals with medicolegal aspects of the hospital treatment of patients suffering from severe mental disorders and who are prone to violent behavior, dangerous to self and others. Violent acts in this study were defined as deliberate and nonconsensual acts of actual, attempted or threatened harm to a person or persons, and classified into categories of any type of violence, physical violence and nonphysical violence, which is in accordance with approaches used in other risk assessment researches. Outline of Cases. The authors present four cases of mentally ill inpatients whose violent behavior toward self or other persons resulted in self-destruction and physical aggression against other persons. The presented cases involved: 1) selfinjury in a patient with acute organic mental disorder after jumping through a hospital window, 2) suicide by drowning of a patient with acute mental disorder after escaping from intensive care unit, 3) suicide in a depressive patient after escaping from a low-security psychiatry unit, 4) physical violence against body and life of other persons in a patient with chronic mental disorder. Conclusion. The presented cases are considered to be rare in clinical practice and risk of violent behavior and the consequent danger of mentally ill inpatients may be efficiently predicted and prevented with appropriate hospital management based on 1) repeated escalation of violent behavior and 2) protection of the patient and others. Hence, if the physician, in order to prevent harmful consequences, does not apply all the necessary measures, including appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, as well as treatment in an adequate setting, such act is against the Criminal Law of the Republic of Serbia which sanctions physician's negligence. Also, according to the Law on Obligations of the Republic of Serbia this presents a legal ground for damage claim and the requirement of liability for nonmaterial damage within a civil procedure.

Keywords: violence, mental disorders, hospitalization

More data about this article available through SCIndeks