The management of acutely disturbed patients in smaller Pacific island comm
unities presents many clinical challenges as well as ethical and human. rig
hts questions. The aggressive, excited, sexually inappropriate, and possibl
y violent disturbed person frequently will need physical restraint and poss
ible seclusion in a secure environment. In practical terms. on many Pacific
islands thr only physically secure room is a jail cell. This environment w
ill protect others and possibly protect the out-of-control person from them
selves. After protection, the next requirements are adequate information ab
out the person and clinically informed individuals who can make a diagnosis
and commence treatment in the jail environment. Adequately trained people
who can diagnose and suggest initial treatment are few and widely dispersed
in Pacific island communities. Two representative case vignettes from the
author's experience as a World Health Organization short-term consultant hi
Tonga and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana islands illustrate the
tension between a disturbed person's right To adequate treatment and the ri
ght of a citizen/patient to be free of coercion.