The Psychiatric Patients’ Complaints Board processes complaints about forced admission, forced detainment, return, forced treatment, forced immobilisation, use of physical force, administration of a sedative using force, protective immobilisation, use of personal alarm and tracking systems and special door locks, personal seclusion that lasts continuously for more than 24 hours, locking of ward doors, ambulant forced immobilisation and locking of patient room at Sikringsafdelingen (maximum security unit).
In complaint cases about forced treatment granted suspensive effect, the Psychiatric Patients’ Complaints Board must make a decision within seven working days after receipt of the complaint; cf. Section 36(3), 1st sentence, of the Mental Health Act.
In 2024 and the first quarter of 2025, the Psychiatric Patients’ Complaints Board concluded 731 formally processed complaint cases about forced treatment granted suspensive effect. Approx. 94.3 per cent of the cases were concluded within seven working days of receipt of the complaint.
In cases about ambulant forced immobilisation at Sikringsafdelingen, the Board must make a decision no later than two weeks after receipt of the complaint; cf. Section 36(3), 2nd sentence, of the Mental Health Act. The Board did neither receive nor conclude such complaint cases in 2024 or the first quarter of 2025.
In all other cases, the Board must make a decision as soon as possible pursuant to Section 36(3), 3rd sentence, of the Mental Health Act. It is presumed in the explanatory notes to the provision that those cases normally must be concluded within two weeks after receipt of the complaint. It is not an absolute deadline, but it is presumed by the Act that it is only an exception that the case processing times are longer than two weeks in those cases.
In 2024 and the first quarter of 2025, the Psychiatric Patients’ Complaints Board concluded 601 formally processed complaint cases pursuant to Section 36(3), 3rd sentence, of the Mental Health Act. Only approx. 4.7 per cent of the cases were concluded within two weeks after receipt of the complaints.
It is set out in Section 71(6) of the Constitutional Act that the lawfulness of a deprivation of liberty outside the criminal justice system which is not decided by a judicial authority and which does not have authority in the legislation on foreign nationals must be submitted to the ordinary courts or other judicial authority for review at the request of the person deprived of liberty or the person acting on their behalf.
Pursuant to Article 5(4) of the European Convention on Human Rights, there is a right to bring a deprivation of liberty before a court so that the court can make a speedy decision on the lawfulness of the deprivation of liberty and on its cessation if the deprivation of liberty is not lawful.
It follows from Section 37(1) of the Mental Health Act that the Psychiatric Patients’ Complaints Board under the Danish Patient Complaints Agency, at the request of the patient or the patient advisor, must bring its decisions on forced admission, forced detainment, return, forced immobilisation, protective immobilisation, ambulant forced immobilisation at Sikringsafdelingen and locking of ward doors before the court, according to the rules in Chapter 43 a of the Administration of Justice Act (Consolidation Act No. 1160 of 5 November 2024). Presentation to the court must take place within five weekdays after the submission of the request according to Section 469(2) of the Administration of Justice Act.
The right to complain to the Psychiatric Patients’ Complaints Board must be used before a citizen can have decisions on forced admission, forced detainment, return, forced immobilisation, protective immobilisation, ambulant forced immobilisation at Sikringsafdelingen and locking of ward doors reviewed by the courts.
The rules on the right to complain and on judicial review in cases about force in the psychiatric sector can be found in Sections 34-39 of the Mental Health Act (Consolidation Act. No. 1045 of 18 September 2024 of the Act on the Use of Force in Psychiatry, etc.).