Information

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Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003 Remedial Order 2026: partial business and regulatory impact assessment

Partial business and regulatory impact assessment (BRIA) on the Order to amend the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003, to extend the ability to specify "recorded matters" to patients subject to a Compulsion Order, Compulsion Order with Restriction Order, Hospital Direction and Transfer for Treatment Direction.


Additional implementation considerations

Enforcement/compliance

To support effective implementation and promote compliance, the Scottish Government will issue clear information, where appropriate, to patients and their named persons as well as guidance to Health Boards Integration Authorities, Local Authorities and those providing care and treatment to patients in forensic mental health settings.

Scottish Ministers will, due to their existing functions under the 2003 Act, monitor the use and delivery of recorded matters at the individual level for persons subject to detention under a CORO, HD or TTD.

The legislative changes extend requirements on RMOs and Scottish Ministers (where relevant) to inform the MWC about recorded matters. As an independent statutory body, the MWC has functions to monitor the application of the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003 and a core mission to safeguard and promote the human rights and welfare of people who are subject to detention for mental health care and treatment.

UK, EU and International Regulatory Alignment and Obligations

Internal Market/ Intra-UK Trade

There is no impact on intra-UK regulatory or trade matters arising from this proposed change.

International Trade Implications

There are no international trade implications.

EU Alignment consideration

There is no impact on EU alignment on standards, access to EU market or the UK Internal Market Act 2020 or Common Framework agreements.

Legal Aid

Patients are entitled to receive legal aid when they make an application or require legal representation before the Tribunal in relation to their order or direction. As most recorded matters will be considered part of the existing processes for monitoring and reviewing forensic mental health orders, it is not anticipated that there will be a significant need for additional legal aid. If the estimate of 25 standalone recorded matter cases is used (see the Tribunal text in Section 3) then the additional legal aid cost is anticipated to be 1130 (average mental health legal aid case cost in 2024-25) x 25 = £28,250 per year.

Business forms

Existing CORO, TTD and HD forms to include recorded matters (CTOs and COs share the same forms so only need amendment to remove reference to patients subject to CTO only in relation to recorded matters).

Contact

Email: forensicmentalhealthpolicy@gov.scot

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