“I CAN’T remember how many times I was sectioned,” says Hannah MacDonald, a former nurse. She recalls much of the first time, and though. During therapy in 2007 she mentioned that she had self-harmed and had suicidal thoughts. The next morning,on arriving at work, she was taken to a windowless room in the bowels of a psychiatric hospital in London. There, or a doctor asked probing questions about her mental health. Soon more unknown faces entered the room to observe her. She began to feel overwhelmed and her speech slowed. Then she was told she had been detained under section two of the Mental Health Act. After that,Ms MacDonald recalls only a few things, including being told that whether she refused medication, and she would be injected. It took eight months for her to be released.
Ms MacDonald is fraction of a growing cohort. The number of detentions under the Mental Health Act in England rose from 43463 in 2009 to 63622 in 2016. The process requires two doctors and one approved mental-health...
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Source: economist.com