News Photos
Search Advanced Sign in / Register fans
 
SOCIETY    
 

Advertisement

DOH plans compulsory community treatment for mentally ill patients
Central News Agency
2009-11-07 05:19 PM
Taipei, Nov. 7 (CNA) The Department of Health (DOH) unveiled Saturday a plan that would make it compulsory for mental patients to receive treatment at the community level for their illnesses.

If the plan is implemented, Taiwan will become the first country in Asia to introduce such a program.

The DOH is planning to launch the program in one or two counties or cities on a trial basis next year and will evaluate the response of patients and their families before expanding the program to the rest of the country, said Shih Chung-liang, head of the DOH's Bureau of Medical Affairs.

Shih said there are approximately 100,000 people in the country who have been issued severe mental illness certificates by the government, 9,000 of whom are in unstable condition and require follow-up treatment.

The compulsory community therapy will target patients who do not meet the criteria for compulsory hospitalization and do not take their medications as required, Shih said.

Chen Cheng-chung, president of the Taiwanese Society of Psychiatry, pointed out that mentally ill patients first have to be screened by a review committee before they can be recommended for compulsory hospitalization, and that at present, 10 percent to 15 percent of the cases screened are not recommended.

When these patients are allowed to return to their communities, their families very often have no idea how to care for them, Chen said. Some patients do not take their medications as prescribed by their doctors, which leads to escalation of their condition, he said.

Under the compulsory community treatment program, patients may be required to report to a rehabilitation center every day or to receive home visits by their case managers every week, for medication and follow-up treatment, according to Chen.

To prevent dangerous behaviors among mentally ill patients, family members and community leaders should report cases of mental illness to health authorities so that experts could determine whether the patients require compulsory hospitalization or compulsory community treatment, he urged.

(By Chen Li-ting and Y.F. Low)



 
Have Your Say :

We welcome your comments on this and other stories. Comments are submitted for possible publication on the condition that they may be edited. Please provide your full name and suburb/location. We also require a working e-mail address – not for publication, but for verification only.

 
Post your feedback
 
 
 
More Stories
Russia extends moratorium on death penalty   2009-11-21
Republicans berate U.S. Treasury Secretary Geithner, call for him to resign: report   2009-11-21
Taiwan donates funds for global bird conservation   2009-11-21
Wang says Yankees still his first choice   2009-11-21
Cultural center   2009-11-21
Suicide bomber kills at least 16 in western Afghanistan   2009-11-21
Replenished Formosan sika deer brings pride to Taiwan   2009-11-20
British POWs remember prisoner of war life in Taiwan   2009-11-20
Grandparents more understanding than fathers: schoolchildren   2009-11-20
KMT vice chair meets Chinese donor for Morakot victims   2009-11-20
Taiwan donates funds for international bird conservation   2009-11-20
University of California to raise fees by 32 percent   2009-11-20
Budding choreographer wins top prize in Britain   2009-11-20
Perishing red algae   2009-11-20
Butterfly habitat withstands typhoon   2009-11-20
Typhoon victims protest relocation plans   2009-11-20
19 killed in courthouse bombing in NW Pakistan   2009-11-20
Changhua magistrate lauds anti-domestic violence efforts   2009-11-19
Kaohsiung human rights school opens   2009-11-19
Taiwan's world-class butterfly habitat withstands typhoon damage   2009-11-19
 
01     02   03   04   05   06   07   Next   >
 
To search for articles form the past seven days, Click on ARCHIVES
  7day free
 
 
TOP

©2009 Taiwan News All Rights Reserved.