Issue - meetings

Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) Supreme Court Judgement

Meeting: 16/06/2014 - The Former Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care (Item 8)

8 Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) Supreme Court Judgement pdf icon PDF 80 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Sam Newton, Service Manager, Safeguarding Adults, presented a report outlining the significant resource implications for the Local Authority in its role as Care Manager, Care Provider and Supervisory Body as a result of a legal challenge and case law.

 

The Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) were introduced to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 through the Mental Capacity Act 2007 which required a process to be implemented which ensured that people who were considered to be deprived of their liberty were safeguarded through the DoLS process.  This had been subject to challenge and case law, the most recent of which was the judgement in P v Cheshire West and Chester Council and P & Q v Surrey County Council which was handed down by the Supreme Court on 19th March, 2014.  The judgement clarified the meaning of ‘deprivation of liberty’ in the context of social and health care which had practical and legal implications for the future of the Mental Capacity Act and the application of Article 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Article 5 being a person’s right to liberty.

 

In order to meet its statutory responsibility following the judgement, the Local Authority would need to invest in additional resources and workforce.  The initial costing for assessment alone could be in the region of £1M with an annual recurrent cost of approximately £700,000 for reviews and new assessments.  This did not include the financial implications in terms of costs for commissioners, legal services, human resources, additional Mental Health Act assessments and implications for Section 117 funding.

 

An initial action plan had been developed but was likely to change as national guidance emerged.  In order to meet the initial impact and demand, the DoLS Team would have to be immediately increased with a Best Interest Assessor and additional business support in order to priorities all urgent DoLS requests (completion in 7 days). All previous DoLS applications received in the past 2 years that were not granted on the grounds that they did not meet the Council’s then understanding of the threshold for deprivation of liberty would need to be reviewed.

 

A more detailed scoping exercise would be undertaken to understand how many individuals in Rotherham would be affected including all Adults and Children (those that are 16 years+ and in Foster Care) and those in receipt of health services.  It was proposed that a working party be established to undertake this exercise and would include:-

 

-          An approach to assessing/reviewing individuals that were impacted upon by the judgement

-          Whether those who lacked the mental capacity to consent would need to be subject to a DoLS authorisation or be detained under a section of the Mental Health Act

-          Proposed planned and measured approach applied in respect of standard requests (completion in 21 days) working with providers to identify, screen and prioritise assessments over a longer time frame e.g. 12 months

-          Future applications not accepted without an appropriate Mental Capacity Assessment and evidence of a  ...  view the full minutes text for item 8