National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Involuntary admission to psychiatry departments
Korbelová, Eva ; Haškovcová, Helena (advisor) ; Šustek, Petr (referee)
The translated thesis deals with the topic of admission to psychiatry departments without the patient consent, which is a so called involuntary admission and involuntary treatment. The teoretical part mentions briefly how social and ethic norms leading to the creation and respecting patient rights have been developing. Basic documents establishing patient rights are indicated, including the right to accept or refuse treatment. Next, there is a description of the history of psychiatry hospitalization without the patient consent and the development of legal rules in the field of involuntary hospitalization. The following chapters are concerned with the incidence of involuntary admission cases. Descriptions of elementary terms referring to the informed consent and hospitalization without patient consent can be found as well. The applied part is focused on a more delailed analysis of some rules of law. It mainly compares Convention on Biomedicine with existing national legislation and deals with the application of the regulations resulting from the Convention on Biomedicine into routine. A topic related to admission and treatment without the patient consent is the issue of informed agreement and competence to legal acts. The text also extends to the domain of patient rights and the patient-health care...
Involuntary admission to psychiatry departments
Korbelová, Eva ; Haškovcová, Helena (advisor) ; Šustek, Petr (referee)
The translated thesis deals with the topic of admission to psychiatry departments without the patient consent, which is a so called involuntary admission and involuntary treatment. The teoretical part mentions briefly how social and ethic norms leading to the creation and respecting patient rights have been developing. Basic documents establishing patient rights are indicated, including the right to accept or refuse treatment. Next, there is a description of the history of psychiatry hospitalization without the patient consent and the development of legal rules in the field of involuntary hospitalization. The following chapters are concerned with the incidence of involuntary admission cases. Descriptions of elementary terms referring to the informed consent and hospitalization without patient consent can be found as well. The applied part is focused on a more delailed analysis of some rules of law. It mainly compares Convention on Biomedicine with existing national legislation and deals with the application of the regulations resulting from the Convention on Biomedicine into routine. A topic related to admission and treatment without the patient consent is the issue of informed agreement and competence to legal acts. The text also extends to the domain of patient rights and the patient-health care...

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1 KORBELOVÁ, Eliška
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