SECTIONING - translation to arabic
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SECTIONING - translation to arabic

LEGAL PROCESS THROUGH WHICH AN INDIVIDUAL WHO IS DEEMED TO HAVE SYMPTOMS OF SEVERE MENTAL DISORDER LOSES FREEDOMS
Sectioning; Civil commitment; Psychiatric imprisonment; Sectioned; Involuntary Treatment Act; Terbeschikkingstelling; Restraining a patient on mental health grounds; MHRB; Compulsory treatment; Involuntary hospitalization; Wrongful involuntary commitment; Wrongful commitment; Wrongful psychiatric confinement; Unjustified commitment; Wrongful hospitalization; Illegal psychiatric stay; Wrongful psychiatric stay; Involuntary wrongful commitment; Wrongful psychiatric hospitalization; Wrongful involuntary confinement; Wrongful psychiatric hold; Wrongfully commit; Wrongfully commited; Wrongfully commitment; Commitment (mental health); Commitment papers; Involuntary emergency admission; Involuntary Emergency Admission
  • Lord Shaftesbury]], a vigorous campaigner for the reform of lunacy law in England, and the Head of the [[Lunacy Commission]] for 40 years.

SECTIONING         

ألاسم

حارَة ; خُطّ ; دائِرَة ; رَبْع ; قِطَاع ; مَحَلَّة ; مُدِيرِيَّة ; مُقَاطَعَة ; مِنْطَقَة ; ناحِيَة

الفعل

اِجْتَزَأَ ; بَعَّضَ ; جَزَأَ ; جَزَّأَ ; شَطَرَ ; شَطَّرَ ; شَعَّبَ

آخرى

بابٌ ( من كِتاب ) ; بَنْد ; فِقْرَة ; مادَّة

sectioning         
قَطْع
sectioning         
قَطْع

Definition

Microtome
·noun An instrument for making very thin sections for microscopical examination.

Wikipedia

Involuntary commitment

Involuntary commitment, civil commitment, or involuntary hospitalization/hospitalisation is a legal process through which an individual who is deemed by a qualified agent to have symptoms of severe mental disorder is detained in a psychiatric hospital (inpatient) where they can be treated involuntarily. This treatment may involve the administration of psychoactive drugs, including involuntary administration. In many jurisdictions, people diagnosed with mental health disorders can also be forced to undergo treatment while in the community; this is sometimes referred to as outpatient commitment and shares legal processes with commitment.

Criteria for civil commitment are established by laws which vary between nations. Commitment proceedings often follow a period of emergency hospitalization, during which an individual with acute psychiatric symptoms is confined for a relatively short duration (e.g. 72 hours) in a treatment facility for evaluation and stabilization by mental health professionals who may then determine whether further civil commitment is appropriate or necessary. Civil commitment procedures may take place in a court or only involve physicians. If commitment does not involve a court there is normally an appeal process that does involve the judiciary in some capacity, though potentially through a specialist court.

Historically, until the mid-1960s in most jurisdictions in the United States, all committals to public psychiatric facilities and most committals to private ones were involuntary. Since then, there have been alternating trends towards the abolition or substantial reduction of involuntary commitment, a trend known as deinstitutionalisation. In many currents, individuals can voluntarily admit themselves to a mental health hospital and may have more rights than those who are involuntarily committed. This practice is referred to as voluntary commitment.

In the United States, a long-term or indefinite form of commitment is applied to people convicted of some sexual offences.

Examples of use of SECTIONING
1. The latest events have prompted him to consider sectioning 23–year–old Amy to force her to get help.
2. Unless it is proposed that near 24–hr surveillance and/or sectioning under the Mental Health Act of these individuals is carried out – where is the benefit ahead of an atrocious crime?
3. Dr JS Bamrah (is known by his initials), who chairs the psychiatric subcommittee of the British Medical Association, said psychiatrists and GPs were recommending sectioning orders that could not be carried out.
4. "There‘s only one way out of this, and anybody with any drug experience will tell you ... that the only way out of this is not sectioning them, not locking them up.
5. "It is not sectioning them, it‘s is not locking them up." "At some point they are going to reach rock bottom, and at that point they will say, ‘I don‘t want to do that any more‘." Of last week‘s shocking photos of the couple, he said: "As a parent, it was sickening, worse than sickening.