Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Missing: Whose decision? Consent, capacity and confidentiality for missing adults with mental health problems Francesca Diamond Third Qualitative Research on Mental Health Conference 2010
2
Missing People Three confidential help lines for those missing and their families 114,000 calls received in the year 2009 -10 Payne’s definition of a missing person “a social situation in which a person is absent from their accustomed network of social and personal relationships to the extent that people within that network define the absence as interfering with the performance by that person of expected social responsibilities, leading to a situation in which members of the network feel obliged to search for the missing person and may institute official procedures to identify the person as missing” (Payne, 1995: 335).
3
What does missing mean to you?
4
What do we know about adults who go missing? (Biehal, Mitchell and Wade 2003)
5
Westminster information sharing
6
Information sharing continued
7
Guiding principle of the protocol Increasing knowledge about service users allows for more effective service provision –Historical records –Benefit to individual and wider community –Eliminating risk Concerns for confidentiality –Right to remain missing
8
Who decides when to share information? The benefits of ‘finding’ Capacity and consent to share information Access to services and treatment
9
Taking forward a shared protocol Choice Service User consultations Supporting above finding Need for further research
10
Francesca.diamond@missingpeople.org.uk http://www.missingpeople.org.uk
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.