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Eleanor Roosevelt, 1958

'Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home -- so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any map of the world. Yet they are the world of the individual person... Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning anywhere. Without concerted citizen action to uphold them close to home, we shall look in vain for progress in the larger world.' Eleanor Roosevelt, 1958

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The Small Places has moved to a new home here, including all the old posts. Any posts after 6th March 2014 will appear on the new website, but old posts are preserved here so that URLs linking here continue to work. Please check out the new site.

Thursday 14 March 2013

In passing... France asks are retirement homes prisons?

This is a fleeting post...  The UN Optional Protocol on the Convention Against Torture (OPCAT) requires signatory states (of which the UK is one) to establish National Preventive Mechanisms (NPM) to conduct independent inspections of places of detention for the purpose of preventing torture, abuse and inhuman or degrading treatment.

In the UK our NPM is made up of a number of bodies which visit places of detention, including Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Prisons (who co-ordinate the UK's OPCAT bodies), and - of particular relevance to readers of this blog - the Care Quality Commission.  Historically the role of OPCAT when it came to health and social care was conceived of in terms of inspecting places where people were detained under the Mental Health Act.  This is something we had been doing in England for a couple of centuries (except for a hiatus between the Mental Health Act 1959 and the 1983 Act).  More recently, with the advent of the DOLS, social care institutions have fallen within CQC's OPCAT responsibilities.  Interestingly, in this year's NPM report by the UK concerns are expressed twice about de facto detention in hospitals and care homes:

'Our NPM business meetings provide members with the opportunity to discuss key findings or best practice, apply learning from monitoring one type of detention to another and learn from work in other jurisdictions. At meetings in 2011–12, the members explored the definition of detention. They discussed the difference between a restriction and a deprivation of liberty, the extent to which some people who reside in, for example, hospitals and care homes, may be considered detained if they are prevented from leaving should they choose to do so, and whether there are sufficient safeguards to protect people in these situations. Given the complexity of these issues, the NPM members decided to explore these in more detail in 2012–13 and share information across jurisdictions within the UK about de facto detention.' p 11
'In some health and social care settings where residents are not legally detained, the restrictions of liberty applied to residents are such that they may constitute de facto detention. This is an issue the NPM members will explore further in 2012–13. The findings from work in 2011–12 described below include instances of force and restraint in places of detention, as well as restrictions of liberty in non-secure residential settings which, when taken together, may constitute a deprivation of liberty.' p22
So it looks like de facto detention will be a key area of interest for 2012-13 for the OPCAT bodies, I look forward to seeing what they make of this.

I think it is really important to remember that the OPCAT definition of detention (see Article 4) is simply a lack of freedom to leave, which really makes perfect sense when you think about the heightened risk of abuse of a captive population, especially one with very limited communication with the outside world.  As we all know, of course, the domestic courts have not interpreted 'deprivation of liberty' under Article 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights (which is, it hardly needs saying, a different treaty) in this way.  So the OPCAT bodies will need to be aware that their duty to monitor places of detention is going to be much, much broader than those who are DOLS detainees.  In fact, I think you could make an argument that if a person is in a placement as a result of a decision by a third party (be they acting under formal authority or ss5-6 MCA), and they would not be regarded as having capacity to choose to live elsewhere if they wanted to, they are not free to leave - as the choice to leave will be left up to 'best interests' decision makers.  That's a massive population.

And we're not even getting into services like supported living, a flagrant breach of OPCAT which the Department of Health and Ministry of Justice were being warned about as long ago as 2008 by the Mental Health Act Commission (Mental Health Act Commission 2008. Risk, Rights, Recovery. Twelfth Biennial Report 2005-2007. London: Mental Health Act Commission., p 122).  Have any of the governments since that time acted to resolve this? Erm, no.  I think that if another abuse scandal in such services were to come to light, there would be a reasonable case to list the Department of Health as a defendant in failing to ensure their Article 3 rights were adequately protected, when they knew there was  problem with the lack of preventive monitoring of such services.

Anyway, in passing those who are following the international debates about the meaning of deprivation of liberty might be interested to know that the French OPCAT monitoring body has asked whether 'retirement homes are prisons'.  My French is diabolical, but it looks to me as if Chapter 6 of the report - to be published online in April - will discuss this further.

All across Europe, it seems, similar questions about being posed about whether those institutions which are located in the community and which we typically take a rather cosy view of, might be places of detention.

2 comments:


  1. Judging by the experience that the majority of persons today are experiencing, whether young with learning disabilities, the physically disabled or the elderly, being placed into care homes and supported living against their will and denied contact with their family members, surely constitute's a violation against one's human rights....seems like they are places of detention......

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  2. In the mental health and learning disability fields, the old 'asylums' / institutions served the purpose of containing people, often younger, who were 'rejected' by society as different/ too difficult.

    The more recent advent and growth of retirement/ residential homes, initially, were to provide a social environment to elderly people who were finding it more difficult to cope alone and wanted company. They were meant to be distinct from nursing homes where the more obviously ill/ challenging elders might be placed to live. Over the last decade these two types of institution have become similar / less distinct as most elderly who can stay in their own homes and the more ill/ disabled and challenged end up locked away- increasingly incarcerated through the social services mis-use of the mental capacity act, or local authority funding regimes.

    In the past families were unlikely to have visited those incarcerated- mostly younger people. Now we have a situation that social workers/ local authorities can break up family relations for those put into residential care establishments when are in discord with them- so the elderly are separated against their will, without consent- from all they know. They are then as much in a prison as were the people in the old long stay institutions located in isolated places.

    The effect is that society does not have to confront old age/ disability / the challenges of care and their relationship with these things. Is it surprising that abuses and harm of elders is rife in these institutions and elsewhere- the message is the wishes of these elderly people do not matter where their lives are concerned.

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