Forensic psychiatry is a subspecialty of psychiatry that operates at the interface
between law and psychiatry. It is concerned with patients who have committed an
often serious offence and may be detained in highly restrictive secure settings.
Unlike in other areas of medicine, patients with mental disorders, and even more so
those who have committed serious offences, are treated not only in order to improve
their own mental health and facilitate recovery but also for the protection of the
public from harm from the patient. This dual role can cause tensions and dilemmas
for the practitioner who has potentially incompatible duties to the patient, third parties
and the wider community [1–3]. The balance between these duties may change
over time and depends on the social and political context of the practitioner. Several
authors have argued that currently, i.e. at the beginning of the twenty-first century,
the pendulum has swung, maybe too far, to risk aversive approaches, potentially
leading to restrictive practices and increasing lengths of stay (LoS) in
forensic-psychiatric
settings [4].