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Exploring pathways to compulsory detention and ways to prevent repeat compulsory detentions in England; clinician perspectives

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Exploring pathways to compulsory detention and ways to prevent repeat compulsory detentions in England; clinician perspectives. / Kular, Ariana; Birken, Mary; Wood, Lisa et al.
In: PLOS Mental Health, Vol. 2, No. 6, e0000314, 20.06.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kular, A, Birken, M, Wood, L, Parkinson, J, Bacarese-Hamilton, T, Blakley, L, Hutchings-Hay, C, Nyikavaranda, P, Alam, D, Ogbolu, R, Bendall, C, Tang, L, Nickson, A, Revell, C, Mbeah-Bankas, H, Mitchell, L, Fraser, KL, White, VC, Lobban, F, Lloyd-Evans, B, Johnson, S & Rizvi, A (ed.) 2025, 'Exploring pathways to compulsory detention and ways to prevent repeat compulsory detentions in England; clinician perspectives', PLOS Mental Health, vol. 2, no. 6, e0000314. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmen.0000314

APA

Kular, A., Birken, M., Wood, L., Parkinson, J., Bacarese-Hamilton, T., Blakley, L., Hutchings-Hay, C., Nyikavaranda, P., Alam, D., Ogbolu, R., Bendall, C., Tang, L., Nickson, A., Revell, C., Mbeah-Bankas, H., Mitchell, L., Fraser, K. L., White, V. C., Lobban, F., ... Rizvi, A. (Ed.) (2025). Exploring pathways to compulsory detention and ways to prevent repeat compulsory detentions in England; clinician perspectives. PLOS Mental Health, 2(6), Article e0000314. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmen.0000314

Vancouver

Kular A, Birken M, Wood L, Parkinson J, Bacarese-Hamilton T, Blakley L et al. Exploring pathways to compulsory detention and ways to prevent repeat compulsory detentions in England; clinician perspectives. PLOS Mental Health. 2025 Jun 20;2(6):e0000314. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmen.0000314

Author

Kular, Ariana ; Birken, Mary ; Wood, Lisa et al. / Exploring pathways to compulsory detention and ways to prevent repeat compulsory detentions in England; clinician perspectives. In: PLOS Mental Health. 2025 ; Vol. 2, No. 6.

Bibtex

@article{6b93cf23653f49d6bda21fcf990b4fcc,
title = "Exploring pathways to compulsory detention and ways to prevent repeat compulsory detentions in England; clinician perspectives",
abstract = "Rates of compulsory detention in psychiatric hospitals have risen over several decades in England and some other higher income countries. This study explores clinicians{\textquoteright} perspectives on how service users come to be compulsorily detained in psychiatric hospitals and their suggestions for reducing these detentions in the future. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 23 clinicians working with individuals who have been compulsorily detained under the Mental Health Act in England. Interviews were carried out by telephone or videoconference. Data was analysed using template analysis, which involved developing a structured framework to organise and analyse data and to develop themes. Three major themes were identified, with multiple sub-themes (a) service user factors that increase the risk of compulsory detention, including high levels of risk, previous/underlying trauma, medication non-adherence, service user perceptions of their mental health state, disadvantage and discrimination, and lack of stability and involvement from family and social networks; (b) service-level reasons for being detained, including lack of communication and continuity of care, historical inability to obtain trust and confidence from parts of population, clinician biases and assumptions, lack of resources, lack of treatment and care variety, and systemic/institutional barriers to engagement; and (c) potential pathways to reducing compulsory detention, including increasing care quality and patient/family level interventions, investing in services, offering choice regarding medication, offering alternatives to detention, and improving discharge planning. Our study advances the literature by highlighting systemic, patient-level, and service-level factors perceived as driving practice. Better-resourced community services and care planning and strategies to address unconscious bias are identified as potential routes to reducing detentions. However, significant limitations are a preponderance of London-based psychiatrists in our sample, which may affect the generalisability of the findings to other roles and locations, and a lack of corroboration of perceived causality with more objective data.",
author = "Ariana Kular and Mary Birken and Lisa Wood and Jordan Parkinson and Theresa Bacarese-Hamilton and Louise Blakley and Chloe Hutchings-Hay and Patrick Nyikavaranda and Dilshard Alam and Raphael Ogbolu and Caroline Bendall and Lai Tang and Amy Nickson and Cathryn Revell and Henrietta Mbeah-Bankas and Lizzie Mitchell and Fraser, {Kathleen Lindsay} and White, {Valerie Christina} and Fiona Lobban and Brynmor Lloyd-Evans and Sonia Johnson and Abid Rizvi",
year = "2025",
month = jun,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pmen.0000314",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
journal = "PLOS Mental Health",
issn = "2837-8156",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Exploring pathways to compulsory detention and ways to prevent repeat compulsory detentions in England; clinician perspectives

AU - Kular, Ariana

AU - Birken, Mary

AU - Wood, Lisa

AU - Parkinson, Jordan

AU - Bacarese-Hamilton, Theresa

AU - Blakley, Louise

AU - Hutchings-Hay, Chloe

AU - Nyikavaranda, Patrick

AU - Alam, Dilshard

AU - Ogbolu, Raphael

AU - Bendall, Caroline

AU - Tang, Lai

AU - Nickson, Amy

AU - Revell, Cathryn

AU - Mbeah-Bankas, Henrietta

AU - Mitchell, Lizzie

AU - Fraser, Kathleen Lindsay

AU - White, Valerie Christina

AU - Lobban, Fiona

AU - Lloyd-Evans, Brynmor

AU - Johnson, Sonia

A2 - Rizvi, Abid

PY - 2025/6/20

Y1 - 2025/6/20

N2 - Rates of compulsory detention in psychiatric hospitals have risen over several decades in England and some other higher income countries. This study explores clinicians’ perspectives on how service users come to be compulsorily detained in psychiatric hospitals and their suggestions for reducing these detentions in the future. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 23 clinicians working with individuals who have been compulsorily detained under the Mental Health Act in England. Interviews were carried out by telephone or videoconference. Data was analysed using template analysis, which involved developing a structured framework to organise and analyse data and to develop themes. Three major themes were identified, with multiple sub-themes (a) service user factors that increase the risk of compulsory detention, including high levels of risk, previous/underlying trauma, medication non-adherence, service user perceptions of their mental health state, disadvantage and discrimination, and lack of stability and involvement from family and social networks; (b) service-level reasons for being detained, including lack of communication and continuity of care, historical inability to obtain trust and confidence from parts of population, clinician biases and assumptions, lack of resources, lack of treatment and care variety, and systemic/institutional barriers to engagement; and (c) potential pathways to reducing compulsory detention, including increasing care quality and patient/family level interventions, investing in services, offering choice regarding medication, offering alternatives to detention, and improving discharge planning. Our study advances the literature by highlighting systemic, patient-level, and service-level factors perceived as driving practice. Better-resourced community services and care planning and strategies to address unconscious bias are identified as potential routes to reducing detentions. However, significant limitations are a preponderance of London-based psychiatrists in our sample, which may affect the generalisability of the findings to other roles and locations, and a lack of corroboration of perceived causality with more objective data.

AB - Rates of compulsory detention in psychiatric hospitals have risen over several decades in England and some other higher income countries. This study explores clinicians’ perspectives on how service users come to be compulsorily detained in psychiatric hospitals and their suggestions for reducing these detentions in the future. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 23 clinicians working with individuals who have been compulsorily detained under the Mental Health Act in England. Interviews were carried out by telephone or videoconference. Data was analysed using template analysis, which involved developing a structured framework to organise and analyse data and to develop themes. Three major themes were identified, with multiple sub-themes (a) service user factors that increase the risk of compulsory detention, including high levels of risk, previous/underlying trauma, medication non-adherence, service user perceptions of their mental health state, disadvantage and discrimination, and lack of stability and involvement from family and social networks; (b) service-level reasons for being detained, including lack of communication and continuity of care, historical inability to obtain trust and confidence from parts of population, clinician biases and assumptions, lack of resources, lack of treatment and care variety, and systemic/institutional barriers to engagement; and (c) potential pathways to reducing compulsory detention, including increasing care quality and patient/family level interventions, investing in services, offering choice regarding medication, offering alternatives to detention, and improving discharge planning. Our study advances the literature by highlighting systemic, patient-level, and service-level factors perceived as driving practice. Better-resourced community services and care planning and strategies to address unconscious bias are identified as potential routes to reducing detentions. However, significant limitations are a preponderance of London-based psychiatrists in our sample, which may affect the generalisability of the findings to other roles and locations, and a lack of corroboration of perceived causality with more objective data.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pmen.0000314

DO - 10.1371/journal.pmen.0000314

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

JO - PLOS Mental Health

JF - PLOS Mental Health

SN - 2837-8156

IS - 6

M1 - e0000314

ER -