Yesterday, during an appointment with my psychologist at the
hospital, it came to light that I was apparently an involuntary patient under
the Mental Health Act for a period of time during my hospital stay. To say I
was surprised is an understatement. I assured my psychologist she was mistaken,
until she read out my file notes from my doctor at the MBU.
“Rachael was an inpatient at the MBU for two months, much of
the time under one to one supervision and under the Mental Health Act”.
The thing is, I don’t remember that at all. I remember being
threatened with the Mental Health Act should I worsen, resist treatment or
abscond. But that’s about it. Other patients who were of involuntary status
seemed to be aware of it. I certainly wasn’t.
But then again, I wasn’t aware of much. I wasn’t aware that
I was on one to one supervision until one day another patient asked my nurse
for something. My nurse declined and the patient glanced at me and asked “oh,
are you still on one to one supervision?”. It was only then I looked around and
realised that I was the only patient with a nurse chained to my side all day. For most of my time in the MBU, the unit was in 'lockdown'. I didn't even realize that the unit could be unlocked until the end of my stay. It was only at then that I realized that the lockdown everyone complained about was initiated because of me (along with another patient). Sorry guys!
The fact that I had psychosis adds another layer of
complexity to the whole issue. Trying to piece together fragmented memories is
difficult enough, but trying to remember when you are not even sure what was
real and what wasn’t is nearly impossible.
I spent a few hours yesterday afternoon researching the
matter. Trawling through pages and pages of government documents, searching
through the endless 1996 Mental Health Act, trying to find anything that would
give me some answers. Surely I would need to fill out a form? Or Steven would
need to be aware?
My search was inconclusive. The complexities of the system are really beyond my patience. Is written evidence from my doctor enough for me to believe what happened? It should be, but somehow it’s not. A written report should stand firm against the unreliable memory of a psychotic patient. But this is me, not just anyone. Surely I should remember something.
My search was inconclusive. The complexities of the system are really beyond my patience. Is written evidence from my doctor enough for me to believe what happened? It should be, but somehow it’s not. A written report should stand firm against the unreliable memory of a psychotic patient. But this is me, not just anyone. Surely I should remember something.
I know that most people reading this will think ‘well what
does it matter?’ I went into hospital, I came out of hospital, I’m feeling
better, are the specific details of my stay really that important?
But to me they are. To me there is a big difference between
seeking help voluntarily, and being treated as an involuntary patient. The
legalities of my treatment matter. What happened to me matters. But most of all
it matters that I can’t seem to trust my own memories and recollections.
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