NMHCCF Restrictive Practices in Australian Mental Health Services Position Paper
Overview
The National Mental Health Consumer and Carer Forum's position paper advocates for eliminating restrictive practices (seclusion, restraint, involuntary treatment) in Australian mental health services. Despite some progress, these practices remain too prevalent, violate human rights, and traumatize consumers. The NMHCCF proposes five strategies emphasizing lived experience participation, recovery-oriented care, and prevention.
Key insights
Key Insights
- Restrictive practices cause trauma and violate human rights without therapeutic benefit
- Peer workers with lived experience are vital for reducing restrictive practices
- Chemical restraint remains poorly defined and inadequately regulated across Australian jurisdictions
- Community Treatment Orders are overused and often substitute for inadequate services
- Recovery-oriented, trauma-informed, person-led care should replace coercive institutional approaches completely
- Early intervention and community-based services prevent need for restrictive hospital practices
- Families and carers need better education and involvement in treatment planning
- Data collection on restrictive practices remains inconsistent and potentially unreliable
- Human rights frameworks increasingly classify involuntary treatment as torture or ill-treatment
- Prevention strategies require collaboration between consumers, carers, and mental health professionals
Did this resource draw on transformative evidence?
This document is fundamentally grounded in experiential expertise through direct testimonies from consumers and families who experienced restrictive practices, including three detailed personal accounts of trauma from seclusion, restraint, and involuntary treatment. The NMHCCF consulted extensively with people with lived experience, emphasizing that peer support workers and consumer perspectives are essential for understanding the harmful impacts and developing effective alternatives to coercive mental health practices.
This document draws on practice wisdom from mental health professionals, clinical staff, and peer workers implementing restrictive practice reduction initiatives. It references insights from the Australian College of Mental Health Nurses, emergency medicine practitioners, and clinicians working across National Beacon Demonstration Sites. The document acknowledges collaboration with professionals developing trauma-informed approaches and recognizes clinical wisdom about de-escalation techniques, safety planning, and therapeutic alternatives to coercive interventions in mental health settings.
This document extensively incorporates research and evaluation insights, citing Australian Institute of Health and Welfare data showing declining seclusion rates, international literature reviews on coercion alternatives, and systematic studies on restrictive practice impacts. It references University of Melbourne research, National Mental Health Commission evaluations, Royal Commission findings, and multiple peer-reviewed studies examining trauma effects, human rights frameworks, and evidence-based interventions for reducing seclusion, restraint, and involuntary treatment in mental health services.
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Resource type
Practice Guideline