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The Mental Capacity Act (England and Wales)

Introduction

The act also allows people to make decisions about their future health treatment in the event that their mental capacity may be reduced – ADVANCED DIRECTIVES (aka living wills). These are essentially used to make advanced decisions to refuse treatment.

Key Principles in the decision making process

The act introduced

Practical use of the act

People may have capacity to make some decisions, but not others (e.g. what to have for tea, but not to decide what treatment they will have). You can asses mental capacity with 4 main criteria:

Who assesses capacity?

For everyday decisions – it is likely to be a relative, friend or carer
For medical decisions – it is likely to be a medical professional
For legal decisions – it is likely to be a solicitor

What happens if the person is judged to lack capacity?

Then someone else will make the decision for you, but they have to involve you as much as possible in the process. There are some decisions which cannot be made for an individual, despite lack of capacity. These include decisions about:

Restraint

Under the act, you can only physically restrain somebody who lack capacity against their will if doing so will prevent harm to the patient. You are only allowed to use reasonable, proportional force.

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