The Guardian view on fixing the Mental Health Act: an overdue return to dignity | Editorial
Briefly

The 1983 Mental Health Act enables the detention of individuals with acute mental illness without consent. This can lead to systemic injustice and coercive interventions.
A review from 2017 highlighted that black individuals were disproportionately detained under mental health laws. The need for reform is urgent to address these disparities.
Labour's new bill aims to enhance patients' rights and ensure that decisions about their care involve family members more openly and transparently.
The proposed legislation prohibits using prison cells for individuals in acute mental health crises, restoring dignity and proper care to those in need.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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