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LEADER 00000cam  2200000 a 4500 
001    ocm35318724 
003    OCoLC 
005    20060919221429.0 
008    960821t19971997dcu           001 0 eng   
010       96042913 
016 7  9708696|2DNLM 
020    1557983690 
035    (OCoLC)35318724 
035    (Sirsi) i1557983690 
040    DLC|beng|cDLC|dVET|dNLM|dEZU|dBAKER|dNLGGC 
043    n-us--- 
049    CKEA 
050 00 KF3828|b.W57 1997 
060 00 1997 E-779 
060 10 WM 33 AA1|bW772r 1997 
082 00 344.73/0412|a347.304412|220 
084    86.66|2bcl 
100 1  Winick, Bruce J. 
245 14 The right to refuse mental health treatment /|cBruce J. 
       Winick. 
264  1 Washington, DC :|bAmerican Psychological Association,
       |c[1997] 
264  4 |c©1997 
300    xv, 427 pages ;|c26 cm. 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    unmediated|bn|2rdamedia 
338    volume|bnc|2rdacarrier 
490 1  The law and public policy 
500    Includes index. 
505 0  Introduction -- PART I: MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT TECHNIQUES
       : A continuum of intrusiveness -- Psychotherapy -- 
       Behavior therapy -- Psychotropic medication -- 
       Electroconvulsive therapy -- Electronic stimulation of the
       brain -- Psychosurgery -- PART II: CONSTITUTIONAL 
       LIMITATIONS ON INVOLUNTARY MENTAL HEALTH AND CORRECTIONAL 
       TREATMENT: The Constitution and other sources of legal 
       limitation on govermentally imposed therapy -- The First 
       Amendment and mental health treatment: constitutional 
       protection against interference with mental processes -- 
       Substantive due process and mental health treatment: 
       constitutional protection for bodily integrity, mental 
       privacy, and individual autonomy -- Treatment as 
       punishment: Eighth Amendment limits on mental health 
       interventions -- Religion-based refusal of treatment: 
       constitutional protection for the free exercise of 
       religion -- Are mental patients different? : equal 
       protection limits on involuntary treatments -- 
       Scrutinizing the government's interest in involuntary 
       treatment -- Scrutiny of the means used to accomplish 
       governmental interests -- PART III: EVALUATING AND 
       IMPLEMENTING THE RIGHT TO REFUSE TREATMENT: A therapeutic 
       jurisprudence analysis of the right to refuse mental 
       health treatment -- Waiver of the right to refuse 
       treatment: the requirement of informed consent -- 
       Procedural due process and involuntary therapy: the right 
       to a hearing -- The future of the right to refuse 
       treatment. 
650  0 Mental health laws|zUnited States. 
650  0 Patients|xLegal status, laws, etc.|zUnited States. 
650  0 Mental illness|xTreatment|zUnited States. 
650 12 Psychotherapy|zUnited States|vLegislation. 
650 12 Treatment Refusal|zUnited States|vLegislation. 
650 22 Informed Consent|zUnited States|vLegislation. 
650 22 Mental Health Services|zUnited States|vLegislation. 
650 22 Patient Compliance|zUnited States|vLegislation. 
830  0 Law and public policy. 
938    Baker & Taylor|bBKTY|c29.95|d22.46|i1557983690|n0002910231
       |sactive 
994    92|bCKE 
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