@article{article_1473456, title={United Kingdom’s Mental Healthcare Act 2017 and the Mental Health Bill 2022}, journal={Hacettepe Hukuk Fakültesi Dergisi}, volume={15}, pages={552–575}, year={2025}, DOI={10.32957/hacettepehdf.1473456}, author={Özraşit, Ticen Azize}, keywords={Akıl Sağlığı, Hasta Hakları, Akıl Hastalıkları, Tedavi Onayı, Toplum Hizmeti, İngiltere}, abstract={A new version of the Mental Health Bill, which was proposed in 2022 by UK authorities, shows a significant change in the way of organizing national legislation on mental health. It incorporates contemporary international human rights principles and individual-focused care. The purpose is to rectify the deficiencies that were encountered with the 1983 Mental Health Act, especially in not meeting the different needs of the population and securing the rights of people with mental illness The legislation aims to establish a more binding framework for improving mental health services within the UK, with an emphasis on safeguarding rights and reducing involuntary treatments. Key provisions of the new bill include better definitions of mental disorders and exclusions for conditions like autism and learning disabilities unless paired with other mental health issues warranting treatment under the Act. It also sets stricter detention criteria, introduces advance choice documents to honor individuals’ care preferences, replaces the ’Nearest Relative’ with a Nominated Person for more decision-making power in cases, strengthens rights to community-based care, creates new roles for Mental Health Review Boards, reforms procedures around voluntary and involuntary admissions, bolsters protections for minors undergoing treatment, among others. Implementing the new legislation poses difficulties such as garnering adequate support, aligning service delivery with the requirements of the law, and moving towards more community-based care settings.}, number={2}, publisher={Hacettepe Üniversitesi}