Assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) is a marketing term for involuntary commitment, but in an outpatient setting. AOT is like putting lipstick on a pig and calling her a princess. Experts on AOT sometimes like to pretend AOT is something different than forced treatment:
“Forcing [a person] to take medication is assisting him to make the choice we think he would make if he had a normally functioning brain.”
~ E. Fuller Torrey, MD & Jonathan Stanley, JD
Let’s delve into the twisted logic here of assisted outpatient treatment.
In the rest of the world, researchers call forced outpatient treatment by its proper name — involuntary outpatient treatment (IOT). Torrey & Stanley’s (2013) reasoning that assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) isn’t “forced” apparently is because people who are in AOT don’t have the necessary insight into their behavior and disorder in order to make a rational decision on their own:
Most individuals with serious mental illness on assisted outpatient treatment have anosognosia.
There’s no research reference attributed to this statement, because there’s actually no data (that I could find anyways) that would support such a conclusion. In fact, I could find no large-scale survey or study conducted on the characteristics of people who are committed via involuntary outpatient commitment laws.
Now, let’s say they have some data I couldn’t find or don’t have access to. What is anosognosia? Traditionally, the term has been used to describe the lack of awareness a patient might suffer from after having a brain injury or stroke. In other words, it’s caused by a physical alteration of your brain.
It is also sometimes used, although significantly less often, in the context of psychiatric disorders to describe a patient’s lack of insight into their disorder. Usually we just say a patient lacks insight. Lacking insight is not a disorder, however, nor is it a recognized symptom of most mental illness diagnoses. Many, many people in outpatient psychotherapy lack insight into their disorder.
“Lacking insight” into your disorder isn’t evidence that your brain is somehow dysfunctional or organically impaired. Despite decades’ worth of research, we still don’t know what a “normally functioning brain” looks like. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of how the brain actually works is still very much in its infancy.
Claiming some sort of brain differentiation — with little scientific basis — is a pretty thin branch to hang one’s argument on. Especially when hundreds of thousands of people lack such insight and still do pretty well in their lives and ordinary voluntary outpatient treatment.
Assisted Outpatient Treatment Results
But you have to ask yourself the core, basic question to any treatment program — does it get results? That is, do people in AOT have better treatment outcomes for their mental illness than those who don’t enter such a program?
Strangely, a lot of the research on AOT looks at things that have nothing to do with helping a person get better. They look at re-arrest rates, cost of the program or treatment, or rates of crime — behavior that is rarely the focus of a person’s treatment.
One recent study of 184 patients in New York City might help shed some light on the answer. The study (Phelan et al, 2010) actually looked at a population of people in AOT and compared them with a control group of people who had been recently discharged from a psychiatric hospital and were attending the same outpatient facilities as the AOT group.
AOT did not help people get better than treatment as usual — both groups experienced similar reductions in psychotic symptoms.
What AOT also did is apparently helped reduce the risk of serious violent behavior. Someone in forced outpatient treatment was four times less likely to report an incident of serious violent behavior than those in the control group. ((As the researchers broadly defined it, however, “serious violent behavior” could also mean getting into a fight in a local bar.))
Sadly, however, this is not the last word on the topic. Because another robust study on AOT called the Duke Mental Health Study (Swanson et al., 2000) found little support that forced outpatient commitment alone reduced violence. Instead, they found that improved outcomes and reduced violence was associated with simply more frequent service visits over an extended period of time (6 months or more).
Which comes as no surprise to most mental health clinicians who regularly work with people with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, the primary diagnoses involved in involuntary outpatient treatment. Frequent treatment appointments help keep a person connected to their services, such as psychotherapy. That’s why day treatment programs can be so effective — a person has someplace they can go every day with a comfortable and familiar regiment.
To this day, research is mixed on the effectiveness of AOT. It doesn’t appear to be more effective than standard treatment in treating a person’s psychiatric disorder — the primary purpose of anything with the word “treatment” in its name. And a reduction of violent behavior can likely be achieved by less coercive means — by simply providing adequate treatment programs that people can partake in on a daily or weekly basis.
There may be a place for involuntary outpatient treatment in our society. But the evidence doesn’t clearly show they work, or that less coercive measures wouldn’t achieve the same effects.
In fact, if you’re involved in the criminal system because of your mental illness, a mental health court is perceived to be less coercive (Munetz et al., 2013), demonstrating the rich diversity of treatment efforts we should embrace. Because we went down this road once before, putting all of our eggs into the involuntary inpatient treatment approach. And we know how well that worked out.
References
Munetz, MR et al. (2013). Mental health court and assisted outpatient treatment: Perceived coercion, procedural justice, and program impact. Psychiatric Services in Advance. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.002642012
Phelan, JC et al. (2010). Effectiveness and outcomes of assisted outpatient treatment in New York State. Psychiatric Services, 61, 137-143.
Swanson JW, Swartz MS, Borum R, et al. (2000). Involuntary out-patient commitment and reduction of violent behavior in persons with severe mental illness. British Journal of Psychiatry, 176, 324 — 331.
Torrey, EF & Stanley, J. (2013). “Assisted Outpatient Treatment”: An Example of Newspeak?: In Reply
Psychiatric Services, 64, 1179-1180. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.641109
3 comments
Personally, I detest enforced care by the courts because it presents treatment as punitive, not beneficial and efficacious to encourage participation. And as I wrote a post at my blog about this a few months ago, no judge ever calls me or any clinic I have worked at in my 20 years of various community mental health sites that get these patients almost all the time, but judges should to get our feedback how to maximize the patient will be cooperative and more voluntary.
If I ever got such a call, I would simply say this: “is the person at all interested in this treatment in any spontaneous comment in court he/she is honestly entertaining a diagnosis of mental health problems and could benefit from treatment?” Because I don’t want to treat people looking for “get out of jail” cards, and I certainly don’t want to substitute for substance abusers/antisocials who perhaps are better served in correctional facilities first, maybe consider mental health care once the time for the crime is completed.
Just curious to ask any colleagues out there who have taken these court appointed cases, how many times has the “patient” accused you of making them violate their probation or have to go back to jail?
Thanks for the laughs, court! With the increase of addiction and blatant criminals coming to CMHCs these past 10 plus years, you wonder why providers have a half life at a site of no more than 3-4 years. If community mental health is going to survive, and perhaps even thrive in these times, it is time to be a bit more selective in who is considered appropriate for care at these sites.
And who is just a dump! But, no judge is interested in really hearing the truth, eh?
I would not see my psychiatrist if there was anything coercive about it. If I were to ever end up in something like AOT, I would flee my state. Frankly, the U.S. doesn’t have the funds to hunt down everyone with mental illness. I haven’t committed any crimes, and treating me like a criminal would not do much for my mental health. My psychiatrist is a healer; I’m not interested in seeing a jailer.
My psychiatrist told me that those who promote more use of force have actually made his job more difficult because it makes people even more afraid of psychiatry and afraid to see him. It makes people see psychiatry as punitive rather healing. He wants no part in it. I’m glad to have a doctor who thinks like him.
The type of psychiatrists and psychologists who see anosognosia everywhere they look might do well to examine their bedside manner. I wouldn’t spend even five minutes talking to some of those pro-force folks, so it’s no surprise to me that others don’t either.
ignoring of course that we already do the courtwork for the SELECT group of persons eligible. We do it before we allow them to bed in jails and prisons, where they end up with or with out a diagnosis, with or without trweatment…with no consent required. That is better? dont go philosophical, talk about the facts, the high probability, dont say well it could be otherwise, unless you are willing to make ity be so!