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Is the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Impacting Mental Health Laws and Policies in High-Income Countries? A Case Study of Implementation in Canada

机译:联合国《残疾人权利公约》是否影响高收入国家的心理健康法律和政策?加拿大实施案例研究

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Background Persons with psychosocial disabilities face disparate access to healthcare and social services worldwide, along with systemic discrimination, structural inequalities, and widespread human rights abuses. Accordingly, many people have looked to international human rights law to help address mental health challenges. On December 13, 2006, the United Nations formally adopted the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) – the first human rights treaty of the 21st century and the fastest ever negotiated. Methods This study assesses the CRPD’s potential impact on mental health systems and presents a legal and public policy analysis of?its implementation in one high-income country: Canada. As part of this analysis, a critical review was undertaken?of the CRPD’s implementation in Canadian legislation, public policy, and jurisprudence related to mental health. Results While the Convention is clearly an important step forward, there remains a divide, even in Canada, between the Convention’s goals and the experiences of Canadians with disabilities. Its implementation is perhaps hindered most by Canada’s reservations to Article 12 of the CRPD on legal capacity for persons with psychosocial disabilities. The overseeing CRPD Committee has stated that Article 12 only permits “supported decision-making” regimes, yet most Canadian jurisdictions maintain their “substitute decision-making” regimes. This means that many Canadians with mental health challenges continue to be denied legal capacity to make decisions related to their healthcare, housing, and finances. But changes are afoot: new legislation has been introduced in different jurisdictions across the country, and recent court decisions have started to push policymakers in this direction. Conclusion Despite the lack of explicit implementation, the CRPD has helped to facilitate a larger shift in social and cultural paradigms of mental health and disability in Canada. But ratification and passive implementation are not enough. Further efforts are needed to implement the CRPD’s provisions and promote the equal enjoyment of human rights by all Canadian citizens – and presumably for all other people too, from the poorest to the wealthiest countries.
机译:背景技术心理社会残障人士面临着全球范围内获得医疗保健和社会服务的不同机会,以及系统性歧视,结构性不平等和广泛侵犯人权的行为。因此,许多人寻求国际人权法来帮助应对心理健康挑战。 2006年12月13日,联合国正式通过了《残疾人权利公约》(CRPD),这是21世纪的第一项人权条约,也是有史以来谈判最快的一项条约。方法本研究评估了CRPD对心理健康系统的潜在影响,并对在一个高收入国家(加拿大)实施CRPD的法律和公共政策进行了分析。作为此分析的一部分,对CRPD在加拿大立法,公共政策和与精神健康相关的判例中的实施情况进行了严格的审查。结果尽管《公约》显然是向前迈出的重要一步,但即使在加拿大,《公约》的目标与加拿大残疾人的经历之间仍然存在分歧。加拿大对《残疾人权利公约》第12条关于心理社会残疾人的法律行为能力的保留,可能最阻碍了其实施。负责监督的CRPD委员会表示,第12条仅允许“受支持的决策”制度,但大多数加拿大辖区仍保持其“替代决策”制度。这意味着,许多患有精神健康挑战的加拿大人仍然被剥夺了做出与其医疗保健,住房和财务相关的决定的法律能力。但是变化正在发生:新的立法已在全国各地引入,而最近的法院判决已开始将决策者推向这个方向。结论尽管缺乏明确的实施,《残疾人权利公约》仍有助于促进加拿大心理健康和残疾的社会和文化范式的更大转变。但是,批准和被动实施还远远不够。为了执行《残疾人权利公约》的规定,并促进所有加拿大公民以及从最贫穷国家到最富裕国家的所有人,也应平等地享有人权,还需要进一步努力。

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