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MENTAL HEALTH (TREATMENT AND CARE) AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2004 (NO 1) (NO 33 OF 2004)
2004
THE LEGISLATIVE
ASSEMBLY
FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
MENTAL HEALTH (TREATMENT AND
CARE) AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2004 (NO
1)
SL2004-33
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated by authority of
Bill Wood MLA
Ag Minister for
Health
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY
MENTAL
HEALTH (TREATMENT AND CARE) AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2004 (NO
1)
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
The purpose of the Mental Health (Treatment and Care) Amendment
Regulations 2004 (No 1) is to enable the Civil Ministerial Agreement with
Queensland, under Part 5A of the Mental Health (Treatment and Care) Act 1994
to come into effect.
In June 1996 the Australian Health Ministers made an in-principle agreement on Cross Border Issues (Mental Health). The Agreement set out the terms and conditions for the involuntary apprehension, detention, interstate transfer and treatment of persons with a mental illness, whether in a mental health facility or within the community.
Following this in-principle agreement some states and territories amended their Mental Health Acts to include parallel sections which recognise the involuntary treatment provisions of the Mental Health Acts across State / Territory borders. These sections also enable the transfer of involuntary mental health patients between jurisdictions under circumscribed conditions. Part 5A of the Mental Health (Treatment and Care) Act 1994 (ACT) achieves this purpose.
For the legislative scheme to come into force, the respective Health Ministers are required to sign bilateral agreements. It is also necessary for regulations to be made recognising the mental health legislation of each state as a ‘corresponding law’.
The ACT Minister for Health has signed a Civil Mental Health Cross Border
Agreement with Queensland. This Agreement will enable; the return of absconded
mental health patients to the state or territory of origin, and the transfer of
involuntary orders between jurisdictions when persons are moved to another
state. This agreement does not include community treatment orders as Queensland
and the ACT do not share a continuous border.
The ACT Minister has previously
signed a general mental health Interstate Agreement with NSW and Forensic Mental
Health Agreements with Queensland and Victoria.