1 / 16

Policing, Mental Health and Restraint Reduction

Policing, Mental Health and Restraint Reduction. Inspector Michael Brown Author – MentalHealthCop blog mentalhealthcop.wordpress.com. Policing and Mental Health. Estimates: 20% or more of all police demand Amongst the most sensitive Amongst the most controversial

Download Presentation

Policing, Mental Health and Restraint Reduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Policing, Mental Healthand Restraint Reduction Inspector Michael Brown Author – MentalHealthCop blog mentalhealthcop.wordpress.com

  2. Policing and Mental Health • Estimates: 20% or more of all police demand • Amongst the most sensitive • Amongst the most controversial • Responding to vulnerable people with complex, often unmet needs. • Reputational impact from the use of force. • Deaths in custody or following contact.

  3. Workshop Outline • Police responses to mental health emergencies • Police responses to criminal suspects who are in mental distress.

  4. Mental Health Emergencies • 22,500 uses of s136 Mental Health Act 1983 • Rising thresholds to access secondary care? • Non-integrated urgent mental health care? • Identifying clinically relevant pathways – • Triage / Assessment / Care.

  5. Restraint • Restraint prevention >>> De-escalation! • Restraint reduction. • Safer restraint. • Recognising clinical implications of restraint.

  6. Mental Health Emergencies • What are the relevant clinical considerations for the police officers in this incident? • After each feed, you get 30 seconds in your group to make a decision. • Answers must be limited to just five words!

  7. Scenario 1 – feed one • You are with another officer, called to the High Street: • “999 call, my son is in the road, shouting at traffic and he’s punched the window of a bus.” • En route: caller is the mother, worried about his mental health and he’s taken drugs today.

  8. Scenario 1 – feed two • You arrive to find traffic moving slowly, a man is in the road, shouting at the traffic. • He has a hand injury, bleeding injuries around his knuckles. • He sees the police arrive and shouts, “I’ll tell you now, come near me and you’ll die.” • Assessment / Decision – what do you do?

  9. Scenario 1 – first decision ?

  10. Scenario 1 – feed three • Communication has failed, he remains in the road. • Cars are sounding their horns, some are slowly manoeuvring around him. • PNC checks reveals he is ‘known’: markers for violence, drugs, and mental health. • Assessment / decision – what do you do?

  11. Scenario 1 – second decision ?

  12. Scenario 1 – feed four • You decide to detain / arrest the man – • He resists violently, punching your colleague to the face, seriously hurting him. • Other officers arrive, he is restrained and handcuffed to the rear. • Assessment / decision – where are you going?

  13. Scenario 1 – third decision ?

  14. Scenario 1 – feed five • Ongoing restraint remains necessary, as he is attempting to bang his head on the floor. • Accident & Emergency? • Mental Health Place of Safety? • Police station? • Anywhere else temporarily willing to receive the person.

  15. Scenario 1 – fourth decision ?!

  16. mentalhealthcop.wordpress.comtwitter – twitter.com/mentalhealthcopfacebook – facebook.com/mentalhealthcop

More Related