MCA 2005 Flashcards
5 key principles of the MCA (Section 1)
Assessment of MC (Section 2, 3)
16+
Assume capacity unless proved otherwise
Support in decision making
Unwise decisions ≠ no capacity
Any decisions made for someone without capacity must be in best interests
Treatment and care should be the least restrictive
Do they have impairment of mind/brain
-Understand, retain, weight, communicate decision?
Best interests decision guidance in MCA (Section 4 (assess BI), 5 (acting in BI without restraint))
Can the decision be postponed or necassery?
Could they regain capacity?
Identify personal views and wishes
Do they have any written advance statement/decision documents? LPA?
Consult close relatives, carers and friends
What are the key principles in DOLS (MCA)
-when would you need to ask for DOLS authorisation
Detain someone for medical treatment, no capacity
Must answer yes to both questions
- are they under constant supervision and control? (do they have complete and effective control over a patient’s care, movements and decisions?)
- are they not free to leave? (if the patient tried/asked to leave, would care staff try to stop the person from leaving?)
Urgent DOLS authorisation
- timeframe active and location
- what applications need to be done
- extensions
Urgent - 1 week, hospital/care home
- when DOL needs to start before standard authorisation can be obtained and will only last a short time
- apply for standard/urgent
- 1wk extension within same admission
Standard DOLS authorisation
- timeframe active and who authorises it
- when is it granted
- extensions
Standard - 1 year, local authority
- assessors decide if DOLS is in best interests
- 1 year extension
Section 6 of MCA
How does this differ from DOLS?
Restraint used when protection from the use of/threat of force is needed
Restraint must be
-proportionate to likelihood and seriousness of harm
-other less restrictive methods have been tried and failed
Must document rationale and action taken
If restraint is used often and other decisions that significantly restrict liberty have been made
- consider if DOLS
- change the care plan
How would you communicate with low risk patients
- no immediate danger
- cooperative
Understand and meet basic needs -phone charging, food, drink? Trauma informed approach -'What's happened to you'? Keep patients informed, manage expectations
How would you communicate with escalating risk patients
-uncooperative but not actively resistive or aggressive
Same approach as low risk patients
Verbal de-escalation/redirection
Solution focused (who can we call that may help?)
How would you communicate with high risk patients
- requires immediate action to prevent harm to self, others, property
- behaviour aggressive, violent
Same approach as escalating risk patients
Manage environment => remove hazards
Regularly review care planning
May need
- physical restraint
- sedation (offer BZ/antipsychotics, administer IM lorazepam)