Clinical characteristics and legal consequences of violent behavior: a case of bipolar disorder

Authors

  • E.L. Gómez-Durán Centres Assistencials Emili Mira i López
  • M.I. Carrión Centres Assistencials Emili Mira i López
  • A. Xifró Institut de Medicina Legal de Catalunya
  • C. Martin-Fumadó Institut de Medicina Legal de Catalunya

Keywords:

Bipolar disorder, threat/control-override symptoms, legal correlates, criminal responsibility

Abstract

The main subject in criminal proceedings is that of criminal responsibility. From this point of view, bipolar disorders sometimes seem to be a highly neglected subject in legal scholarship. Yet these disorders may affect the decision-making capacity across the spectrum of the law, especially when manic and psychotic symptoms are involved. This case studies a 37-year-old woman, diagnosed with bipolar affective disorder, who attacked the neighbor of her ex-husband during a manic episode with psychotic symptoms. Two types of these psychotic symptoms are specially important: ideation of harm and experiences of passivity/ influence on the body and thought insertion (threat/ control–override symptoms). Hostility against her exhusband was also involved in the attack. Researchers have described all those symptoms as important predictors of violence, and they have determinant legal correlates.

Published

2010-11-01

How to Cite

Gómez-Durán, E.L., et al. “Clinical Characteristics and Legal Consequences of Violent Behavior: A Case of Bipolar Disorder”. Actas Españolas De Psiquiatría, vol. 38, no. 6, Nov. 2010, pp. 374-6, https://actaspsiquiatria.es/index.php/actas/article/view/472.

Issue

Section

Clinical Note