Abstract:
The challenges in assessing whether psychiatric treatment should be provided on voluntary,
assisted or involuntary legal bases prompted the development of an assessment algorithm that may
aid clinicians. It comprises a part that assesses the incapacity to provide informed consent to treatment,
care or rehabilitation. It also captures the patient’s willingness to receive these treatments, the risk
posed to the patient’s health or safety, financial interests or reputation and risks of serious harm to
self or others. By following various decision paths, the algorithm yields one of four legal states: a
voluntary, assisted, or involuntary state or that the proposed intervention should be declined. This
study examined the predictive validity and the reliability of this algorithm. It was applied 4052 times
to 135 clinical case narratives by 294 research participants. The legal states yielded by the algorithm
had high statistical significance when matched with the gold standard (Chi-squared = 6963; df = 12;
p < 0.001). It was accurate in yielding the correct legal state for the voluntary, assisted, involuntary
and decline categories in 94%, 92%, 88% and 86% of the clinical case narratives, respectively. For
internal reliability, a correspondence model accounted for 99.8% of the variance by which the decision
paths clustered together fittingly with each of the legal states. Inter-rater reliability testing showed
a moderate degree of agreement among participants on the suitable legal state (Krippendorff’s
alpha = 0.66). These results suggest the algorithm is valid and reliable, which warrant a subsequent
randomised controlled study to investigate whether it is more effective in clinical practice than
standard assessments.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILTY STATEMENT : The Research Ethics Committee that approved the research determines
the limits on the availability of raw and processed data based on the merits of an application to gain
access, the interests of stakeholders, and the mandates of research regulatory authorities. No special
computer code or syntax is needed to reproduce analyses other than provided standardly in the
SPSS-software program (version 27). Regarding the availability of research materials, the algorithm is
available as a supplement to the article.