ABSTRACT

This chapter focuses on two large-scale legal changes that have occurred in England and Wales since the publication of the first edition of this text, the Mental Capacity Act 2005, and the Mental Health Act 2007. Mental health law is concerned with the management of people who are afflicted with poor mental health. Mental health legislation, like all European legislation, is subject to the European Convention on Human Rights. Mental capacity was hardly mentioned in psychiatric books in the twentieth century; it is everywhere and causing some confusion. An approved clinician may be a doctor or other mental health professional who has had specialized training. The pre-2007 Mental Health Act 1983 contained various ‘exclusions whereby a person might not be treated as suffering from a mental disorder by reason only of promiscuity or other immoral conduct, sexual deviancy or dependence on alcohol or drugs.’.