Available Formats
Mental Health Homicide and Society: Understanding Health Care Governance
By (Author) David P Horton
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
19th September 2019
19th September 2019
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
345.4204
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
540g
A homicide committed by a mentally disordered person who is under the care of health service professionals is a shocking event. Otherwise known as a patient homicide, these incidents are followed by an investigation into the care and treatment received by the perpetrator. These investigations are often regarded as a way to learn lessons, establish accountability and provide catharsis to families and the public. The book argues however that patient homicide events and the circumstances in which they occur are communicated about within closed systems of life (eg law, medicine). These systems operate according to unique internal logics. The communications produced by these systems, nevertheless, resonate in society and enable a diverse and complex space of governance to emerge a space of governance in which universal understandings about patient homicides, health care, public safety and risk are unachievable. The Scottish Government initiated reform of their patient homicide investigation procedures in 2017 and plans to reform patient homicide investigations in England are slowly germinating. This original and compelling book is therefore a timely and important contribution. It concludes that health policy makers should re-evaluate their normative commitments to patient homicide risk reduction in a world of disharmony, objection and resistance.
[T]his dense and closely argued book rewards the close reading that it requires, and the author is to be congratulated on bringing such detailed and sustained attention to this complex area. -- Alex Ruck Keene * Mental Capacity Law and Policy Blog *
David P Horton is Lecturer in Law at the University of Liverpool.