You are here:
Home / Archives for Kate Raue
The New Zealand Health and Disability Services Standards define seclusion as it relates to the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act 1992 “where a consumer is placed alone in a room or area, at any time and for any duration, from which they cannot freely exit”. To me, the definition is clear enough.
Tags: 'Peaceful Place', 'physical restraint or involuntary seclusion of a patient shall not be employed except in accordance with officially approved procedures of the mental health facility and when it is the only means ava, (AIU), A clear explanation of your medical condition and the types of treatment available, a presumption that any intervention will be the least intrusive option available, Acute Inpatient Unit, all instances of physical restraint must be recorded and that any patient who is secluded must be kept under humane conditions and supervised regularly by qualified members of staff, all other practical options have been considered or tried, Always be treated with respect, An honest description of the risks and costs as well as the benefits of proposed treatment, An interpreter if required, and in any case, apply equally to all people without discrimination, Ask questions and receive competent answers, at any time and for any duration, Be treated with care and skill and receive correctly administered treatment, Change their mind if you have already said yes or no to a course of treatment, comicStyle, Defining seclusion as it relates to the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act 1992, emphasise that rights, enactment of the Crimes of Torture Amendment Bill, ensure current practice met human rights standards for the care and safety of mental health service users, Featured Content, followed an assessment and that it could be fully justified, from which they cannot freely exit, Gail Penney, Human Rights Commission plays co-ordinating role as the Central Preventive Mechanism, ICCPR, ICESCR, Ideas worth spreading, identified proactive alternative interventions to ensure that seclusion was only used where it was required, if the patient has been out of seclusion for more than one hour, inappropriate use of seclusion was identified as an issue, individual service delivery plan, International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights, Kate Raue, Katherine Raue, lifeStyle, main blog, Make their own decisions, Medical staff who listen to you and communicate clearly, meeting requirements of legislation, mindStyle matters, New Zealand Action Plan for Human Rights, New Zealand Human Rights, No Woman is an Island, Not be discriminated against, OPCAT, Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture, patient rights, penneylane, penneylaneonline, practices of seclusion also need to ensure patient rights, practices of seclusion also need to ensure that current standards and relevant professional codes of practice are met throughout the process, preferred alternative interventions, pressured or taken advantage of, prevent or minimise the use of seclusion, promote and fulfil the rights in that treaty, providing a global set of minimum standards for protecting persons with mental illness and improving mental health care, Rangimarie, Rangimarie Maori, ratification guarantees its delivery domestically, ratification of a treaty a country recognises the international law and accepts a legal obligation to respect, Refuse to participate in teaching or research, Register a complaint, seclusion as it relates to the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act 1992, seclusion starts when the patient enters the conditions of seclusion, seclusion time should not extend beyond what is 'strictly necessary', Services that promote dignified and independent lives, stress the concept of the least restrictive intervention, system of National Preventive Mechanisms for the purpose of carrying out regular inspections of detention facilities, Te Whare Ahuru, Ted Talk, that preserves and enhances personal autonomy, the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, The Human Rights Commission (as the Central Preventive Mechanism), the inappropriate use of seclusion, the International Bill of Rights, the International Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights and Dignity of Persons with Disabilities, The International Human Rights Framework, The New Zealand Health and Disability Services Standards, the right not to be subjected to cruel and degrading treatment, the right to be treated with humanity and dignity and the right to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, The seclusion period is deemed to have ended when the patient leaves the conditions of seclusion without the expectation of return, the Universal Declaration, turnStyle, UN Principles address the circumstances under which seclusion is administered, UN Principles do not define seclusion, UN Principles do not specifically define the appropriate length of time that a person can be placed in seclusion, UN Principles emphasise the importance of quality treatment, United Nations Principles for the Protection of People with Mental Illness and for the Improvement of Mental Health Care (the UN Principles), Universal Declaration of Human Rights, VidStyle, When a country ratifies one of these treaties it accepts that it will be bound by the terms of the treaty, where a consumer is placed alone in a room or area, www.penneylaneonline.com
Ten days ago Kate Raue was moved from Rangipapa to Te Whare Ahuru. For privacy reasons Rangipapa weren’t telling anyone where she’d gone, only that she’d ‘left the Unit’. I thought at the time that the construction of the explanation was an interesting one so I had my doubts about whether she’d been released to […]
Tags: “There are those who pass like ships in the night, a marked departure from the norm must be evident, a mental disorder there is defined as "an abnormal state of mind, acute mental health inpatient unit, an abnormal state of mind (whether of a continuous or an intermittent nature), and to feel mind and body, capacity to communicate, characterised by delusions, comicStyle, Corrections and the Courts interact with each other, definition of having a mental disorder as defined in s 2 of the Mental Health (Compulsory Assessment and Treatment) Act 1992, determining a person's competency to stand trial in a court of law, engage in meaningful therapy, Featured Content, focuses on low key activities and creating a calm environment, forensic psychiatrist, forensic psychiatry, forensic psychiatry is the juncture between law and psychiatry, four dimensions of Maori well-being, Gail Penney, helping each other though joy and through strife. And they are the kind who give meaning to life.”, high incidence of the use of restraint, high incidence of the use of seclusion, high staff turnover, holistic approach to care, Ideas worth spreading, influenced by the Maori mental health model, intensive care unit (ICU), intensive nursing, Kate Raue, Katherine Raue, lack of sufficient medical staff, law seeking to establish whether a mental disorder is in fact present?, lifeStyle, located in Lower Hutt, low stimulus environment, main blog, Mason Durie, mind and body are inseparable, mindStyle matters, New Zealand case law maintains that the notion of abnormality be determined objectively, not just an extreme of usual conduct., not just what is normal for the individual, of such a degree that it: (a) Poses a serious danger to the health or safety of that person or of others; or (b) Seriously diminishes the capacity of that person to take care of himself or herself.", or by a disorder of mood or perception or volition or cognition, or by disorders of mood or perception or volition or cognition, penneylane, penneylaneonline, physical, Rangipapa, Rangipapa is a Forensic Mental Health Service, Ships in the Night, spiritual, strong foundation and four equal sides, sub-speciality of psychiatry, support science of criminology, Te Rangimarie, Te Whare Ahuru, Te Whare Tapu Wha, Ted Talk, the place where Mental Health, then sail out of sight with never a backward glance of regret; folks we know briefly then quickly forget. Then there are friends who sail together, therapy, through quiet waters and stormy weather, to think, turnStyle, use a variety of strategies, VidStyle, wellness centre, Whanau or family, what is normal in society as a whole, who meet for a moment, www.penneylaneonline.com
Rights may be legal, social, or ethical principles of freedom or entitlement. They are what is allowed or owed to people, according to some legal system, social convention, or ethical theory.
Tags: a person’s family or support network is included in care and treatment, a support person of your choic, aimed at rehabilitation, civil rights or statutory rights, Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers' Rights, Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers' Rights 1996, comicStyle, cultural, decide about involvement in health teaching and research, decide about treatment and care, dignity and independence, diverse and cumulative consequences, effective communication, enduring consequences, experience of health and illness as a fluid, factors associated with a psychiatric crisis, fair treatment, Featured Content, freedom or entitlement, Gail Penney, Ideas worth spreading, improperly detained, information, inpatient service, Kate Raue, Katherine Raue, laws, legal, Legal rights, legal system, life as a journey undertaken on an ocean of experience, lifeStyle, main blog, make complaints, mental health, Mental Health Commission, mental health services, mindStyle matters, needs of women in treatment programmes, newest approaches to mental health care, or ethical principles of freedom, or ethical theory, penneylane, penneylaneonline, people in distress can become emotionally, physically and spiritually shipwrecked., political, proper standards of care, Rangipapa, respect, social, social convention, societal context, society's customs, statutes or actions by legislatures, Ted Talk, The Tidal Model uses the metaphor of water, Tidal Model, turnStyle, users of health services, VidStyle, www.penneylaneonline.com
The strongest commitment a Government can make to protect the Human Rights of its citizens is to embed them in a constitution, and create statutory procedures to enforce the international standards. New Zealand has a good record of approving of and compliance with its international obligations.
In New Zealand, Human Rights have never been protected by a single constitutional document nor any serious piece of legislation. Instead, we’ve had a raft of dissimilar laws, policies and programmes providing only elements of protection. It’s not good enough!
Tags: 'Human Rights in New Zealand 2010', 'improper detainment', 5 KURIOUS KIWI QUESTIONS, basic of human rights, Bill of Rights Act, constitutional document, covering health, dissimilar laws, economic, Education, elements of protection, equal employment opportunities, Gail Penney, government failure, human rights, Human Rights Act, Human Rights Commission, International Human Rights framework, Kate Raue, Katherine Raue, legislation, lifeStyle, Mental health policy, Mental health promotion, mindStyle matters, New Zealand, NZ Minister of Justice, penneylaneonline.com, policies, programmes, promotion and protection of human rights, section 7 report, social and cultural rights, social security and housing., structural discrimination, Throwing Out the Lifelines, toothless Bill of Rights, www.penneylaneonline.com
Next Page »