Psychiatric Malpractice in New Jersey: Mental Health Negligence and Patient Rights
Your loved one told their therapist they wanted to die. The psychiatrist increased their medication and sent them home. Three days later, they were gone. Psychiatric malpractice claims lives—and families are left asking why nobody listened.
Mental health treatment requires trust between patients and providers. When psychiatrists, psychologists, and other mental health professionals breach that trust through negligence, the consequences can be devastating. Suicide, medication overdoses, improper commitment, and failure to treat serious conditions all represent potential malpractice that destroys lives and families.
At Gencarelli & Rimassa Law, our New Jersey medical malpractice attorneys represent victims of psychiatric negligence and their families. We understand the unique challenges of mental health malpractice cases and have the expertise to hold providers accountable when they fail to meet professional standards.
If you or a loved one suffered harm from negligent psychiatric care, call (201) 549-8737 for a free case evaluation. You pay nothing unless we win.
The Scope of Mental Health Care in New Jersey
Mental health treatment encompasses various settings and provider types.
Types of Mental Health Providers
Psychiatrists: Medical doctors (MD/DO) specializing in mental health who can prescribe medication
Psychologists: Doctoral-level providers (PhD/PsyD) providing therapy and psychological testing
Licensed Clinical Social Workers (LCSW): Master’s-level therapists providing counseling
Psychiatric Nurse Practitioners: Advanced practice nurses with prescribing authority
Counselors and Therapists: Various licensed professionals providing talk therapy
Treatment Settings
Outpatient Treatment: Office-based individual and group therapy, medication management
Inpatient Psychiatry: Hospital-based treatment for acute psychiatric crises
Partial Hospitalization: Intensive day treatment programs
Residential Treatment: Long-term residential psychiatric facilities
Emergency Departments: Crisis intervention and emergency psychiatric evaluation
Common Types of Psychiatric Malpractice
Psychiatric malpractice encompasses various failures that cause patient harm.
Suicide Risk Assessment Failures
Suicide is the most devastating outcome of psychiatric negligence:
Inadequate Risk Assessment: Failing to properly evaluate suicide risk when warning signs exist:
- Not asking about suicidal thoughts when patients show depression
- Dismissing expressed suicidal ideation as “attention seeking”
- Failing to assess means, plan, and intent
- Not reviewing risk factors (prior attempts, substance abuse, recent losses)
Failure to Hospitalize: Not admitting patients who meet criteria for inpatient treatment:
- Clear suicidal intent with plan and means
- Inability to contract for safety
- Lack of adequate outpatient support
- Severe depression with suicidal thoughts
Premature Discharge: Releasing hospitalized patients before they are safe:
- Discharging while actively suicidal
- Inadequate discharge planning
- Failure to ensure outpatient follow-up
- Not providing crisis intervention resources
Inadequate Monitoring: Failing to properly observe high-risk patients:
- Insufficient suicide precautions on inpatient units
- Inadequate observation during high-risk periods
- Failure to remove means of self-harm
- Not responding to warning signs during treatment
Medication Errors in Psychiatry
Psychiatric medications require careful management:
Improper Medication Selection: Prescribing inappropriate medications:
- Medications contraindicated for patient’s diagnosis
- Drugs with dangerous interactions with patient’s other medications
- Medications that previously caused adverse reactions
Inadequate Monitoring: Failing to watch for medication complications:
- Not monitoring lithium levels leading to toxicity
- Missing signs of antipsychotic side effects
- Failing to assess for antidepressant-induced mania
- Not tracking weight and metabolic changes
Improper Dosing: Incorrect medication dosages:
- Starting doses too high causing severe side effects
- Inadequate dosing leading to treatment failure
- Dangerous rapid dose increases
- Abrupt discontinuation causing withdrawal
Failure to Treat: Not providing indicated medication treatment:
- Withholding necessary medication due to personal bias
- Allowing insurance barriers to prevent treatment
- Not adjusting treatment when current regimen fails
Failure to Diagnose and Treat
Psychiatric conditions can be missed or improperly managed:
Missed Diagnosis: Failing to identify treatable conditions:
- Depression dismissed as normal sadness
- Bipolar disorder misdiagnosed as depression
- PTSD overlooked after trauma
- Psychosis attributed to drug use without proper evaluation
Delayed Treatment: Waiting too long to intervene:
- Postponing treatment while symptoms worsen
- Not escalating care when outpatient treatment fails
- Delaying hospitalization until crisis occurs
Inadequate Treatment Planning: Poorly designed treatment:
- No clear diagnosis or treatment goals
- Failure to coordinate care among multiple providers
- Not addressing substance abuse co-occurring with mental illness
- Inadequate family involvement when appropriate
Improper Involuntary Commitment
Both committing patients who don’t meet criteria and failing to commit those who do can constitute malpractice:
Unnecessary Commitment: Involuntarily hospitalizing patients who don’t meet legal criteria, violating civil rights
Failure to Commit: Not petitioning for involuntary treatment when patients meet criteria and are at risk
Prolonged Commitment: Keeping patients hospitalized beyond legal limits or medical necessity
Inadequate Due Process: Failing to follow legal procedures for commitment and discharge
Violation of Confidentiality
Mental health treatment depends on trust:
Unauthorized Disclosure: Revealing patient information without consent
Improper Sharing: Disclosing information to inappropriate parties
Documentation Errors: Recording sensitive information in ways that compromise privacy
Abandonment and Duty to Warn
Patient Abandonment: Terminating treatment without adequate notice or referral, leaving vulnerable patients without care
Duty to Warn Failures: Not warning identifiable potential victims when patients make credible threats (Tarasoff obligations)
Legal Standards for Psychiatric Care in New Jersey
Psychiatric providers must meet professional standards while navigating complex ethical and legal obligations.
The Standard of Care for Psychiatry
New Jersey requires psychiatrists and other mental health providers to:
- Conduct appropriate assessments and evaluations
- Develop reasonable treatment plans
- Monitor patients for treatment response and side effects
- Respond appropriately to suicidal and violent ideation
- Maintain patient confidentiality except when legally required to breach it
- Provide appropriate informed consent
- Avoid abandoning patients
Special Considerations in Psychiatric Malpractice
Mental health treatment involves unique challenges:
Patient Autonomy vs. Safety: Balancing patients’ right to refuse treatment with duty to protect them from self-harm
Predicting Suicide: Recognizing that suicide prediction is imperfect but providers must follow established protocols
Involuntary Treatment Standards: Following strict legal criteria for commitment and medication over objection
Confidentiality Limits: Understanding when duty to protect outweighs confidentiality
Proving Psychiatric Malpractice in New Jersey
Psychiatric malpractice cases require proving negligence caused identifiable harm.
Elements of a Psychiatric Malpractice Claim
- Duty: A provider-patient relationship existed
- Breach: The provider violated the standard of care
- Causation: The breach caused or contributed to the patient’s injury
- Damages: The patient or family suffered compensable losses
Challenges in Psychiatric Malpractice Cases
These cases present unique evidentiary challenges:
Causation: Proving that proper treatment would have prevented suicide or other harm. Courts recognize that:
- Suicide is often unpredictable
- Even proper treatment doesn’t guarantee prevention
- Patients retain autonomy to make poor choices
However, providers can be liable when:
- They failed to follow established suicide prevention protocols
- Reasonable assessment would have identified high risk
- Standard interventions were not implemented
Confidentiality vs. Disclosure: Balancing patient privacy with the need to prove what occurred in therapy sessions
Mental State Evidence: Using patient statements and records that may be protected
Expert Testimony Requirements
Psychiatric malpractice requires expert testimony from qualified psychiatrists or psychologists establishing:
- What the standard of care required
- How the provider’s conduct deviated from that standard
- How the deviation caused the patient’s injury
Damages in Psychiatric Malpractice Cases
Victims of psychiatric negligence and their families may recover compensation.
Damages in Survival Actions
When patients survive psychiatric malpractice:
- Medical expenses for treatment of injuries (overdose, suicide attempt complications)
- Therapy costs for additional mental health treatment
- Lost income due to disability
- Pain and suffering
- Loss of enjoyment of life
Wrongful Death Damages
When psychiatric malpractice results in death:
- Funeral and burial expenses
- Lost financial support
- Loss of companionship, guidance, and services
- Emotional suffering of survivors
Unique Considerations
Courts recognize the profound harm of psychiatric negligence:
- Loss of chance for recovery from mental illness
- Impact on families who lost loved ones to suicide
- Damages for conscious pain and suffering before death
Frequently Asked Questions About Psychiatric Malpractice
Can I sue if my loved one committed suicide?
Potentially. If psychiatric providers failed to:
- Properly assess suicide risk
- Hospitalize when indicated
- Monitor adequately
- Provide appropriate treatment
And these failures caused or contributed to the suicide, you may have a wrongful death claim. However, suicide cases are complex, and not every suicide results from malpractice.
What if the patient didn’t tell their doctor they were suicidal?
Physicians must still assess suicide risk based on available information. Warning signs include:
- Depression and hopelessness
- Social withdrawal
- Giving away possessions
- Recent losses or trauma
- Substance abuse
- Prior suicide attempts
Failure to assess risk when warning signs exist may constitute negligence even without explicit suicide statements.
Can I sue for side effects from psychiatric medication?
Potentially. If the provider:
- Prescribed medication without adequate informed consent about risks
- Failed to monitor for known side effects
- Continued medication despite dangerous side effects
- Prescribed dangerous drug combinations
You may have a claim for medication-related injuries.
How long do I have to file a psychiatric malpractice claim?
Generally, two years from the date of injury or from when the injury was discovered. In wrongful death cases, the clock typically starts at death. The discovery rule may extend deadlines in some cases. Consult an attorney promptly.
What are warning signs of psychiatric malpractice?
Red flags include:
- Suicidal statements dismissed or minimized
- Medication changes without explanation or monitoring
- Patient released from hospital while still expressing suicidal thoughts
- No follow-up scheduled after crisis intervention
- Therapist terminating treatment abruptly without referral
- Failure to respond to family concerns about patient safety
How Gencarelli & Rimassa Law Handles Psychiatric Malpractice Cases
Our approach to mental health malpractice combines sensitivity with aggressive advocacy.
Investigation Process
- Medical record review: Comprehensive analysis of psychiatric evaluations and treatment records
- Timeline reconstruction: Establishing when warning signs appeared and how providers responded
- Standard of care evaluation: Assessment of whether suicide prevention protocols were followed
- Expert consultation: Engagement of psychiatric experts to evaluate care
- Causation analysis: Connection between negligence and harm suffered
Why Choose Gencarelli & Rimassa Law
- Sensitivity to mental health issues: We understand the stigma and challenges
- Experience with suicide cases: We handle these difficult matters with compassion
- Medical expertise: Access to qualified psychiatric experts
- Family advocacy: Supporting families who lost loved ones
- No fee unless we win: Contingency representation eliminates financial risk
Conclusion
Psychiatric treatment requires providers to balance patient autonomy with safety obligations. When mental health professionals fail to assess suicide risk, properly monitor patients, or provide appropriate treatment, the consequences can be fatal. New Jersey law holds psychiatric providers accountable for negligence that causes patient harm.
If you or a loved one suffered from negligent psychiatric care, the attorneys at Gencarelli & Rimassa Law can help. We understand the complexities of mental health malpractice and have the compassion and expertise to pursue justice for victims and their families.
Mental health negligence has devastating consequences—but you don’t have to face it alone. Call Gencarelli & Rimassa Law at (201) 549-8737 for a free, confidential consultation. We’ll evaluate your case with sensitivity and fight for the compensation you deserve.