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Publication

Psychiatry and Public Policy

Dession, George
Abstract
BROADLY SPEAKING, all aspects of psychiatry may legitimately be considered matters of public or community concern. The development of any intellectual discipline, with such insights and technological applications as may stem from it, is, of course, of some concern to all persons at all times, whether they know it or not. My focus at the moment is, however, more restricted. I propose to concentrate on situations in which the psychiatrist is called upon to make or participate in the making of decisions on behalf of the community as a whole, excluding those situations and decisions where he may properly feel that his profession as such is concerned or that he and his patient are the parties primarily involved. In other words, I am concerned with the impacts and practices of psychiatrists when they function outside the private relation of physician and patient. Such functioning by the psychiatrist is called for by situations in which a person who presents psychiatric problems happens also to be in conflict with other persons to such an extent that the community is involved, either at present or prospectively. In such situations, a significant interaction between the perspectives and practices of medicine and law takes place.