@BM2A I agree completely with
@joeylittle about augmenting your care, and strategies for handling your medications, I already and have for sometime used similar approaches for similar reasons. But I do have a suggestion, get one of the pill boxes that covers the times of day you take your medications and covers a week. And make bulk of your medications inaccessible easily, like having someone else how them until you need to refill your pill box, or placing a lock box at other end of the house with the medications, and a sign on and in the box for the crisis number to call if you're in crisis. You probably have some ideas of your own, but like I already do, sabotaging my opportunity to S/H has gone a long ways to keep me safer longer, and keep me out of the hospital longer, and keeping choices instead of them being taken away.
@joeylittle Maybe sometimes, when I was in virginia I had to deal with a lot of my way or the highway type of treatment planning, coercion just makes one want make it as hard on them as possible. The strategy worked for me, but I had a lot forced down my throat and never really got any real help like I am getting now. But it will backfire in most normal situations, mine was not normal, and my needs were not getting met, and instead dictated to me. Britain is a much different system but in many ways the system in virginia mirrors the british model. For instance in maryland for someone who is a danger to themselves, a petition has to be filed with the court clerk, and wait to the end of the judges docket, where he reviews the petition and asks the petitioner questions. The subject is taken to the ER by the sheriff, and the ER certifies the need for commitment if the subject is not willing to get treatment voluntarily. And if beds are available the subject can be treated in the hospital's psych unit either voluntary or involuntary.
In virginia they have Community Service boards in each county, under the CSB are mental health centers, day treatment, emergency services who go out and evaluate a person for need of psych detention, which ends up being no cause, court mandated admission (voluntary), or Involuntary. The CSB has the power to order detention for psych reasons first, then a judge or magistrate looks at the petition. I have many times been threatened with detention for refusing to accept a coercive item in a treatment plan I did not agree with.
The state even provides medications thru the state pharmacy.
So in some respects the british system structure is similar to the system in virginia that I had to deal with. Where I am now, I don't need to use the strategy I mentioned, because they are giving me the care I needed all along that virginia failed to. Where I am now, I can be open about everything including s/h and s/i and not loose choices or anything else. I have no need to treat the "system" as an adversary where I am now.
For me I had to play their game the way they play it, just to get my needs met if that was even possible. It's a strategy that works sometimes, but only in situations that where all the power is on one side, and no one on the other side cares what you think or want, and your being dictated to. When the other side does not know what you're thinking because your mum, it makes them come to you to communicate. For me it has led to them hearing what I want or think and compromise, instead of being dictated to with threats of our way or the highway. This was so much a problem that when I served on the first committee member panel for the CSB human rights committee (Each CSB was required to have one, VA was in violation until I took issue with the CSB). We had to some human rights rules for the CSB to operate by, I made sure one of those items prohibited coercive treatment plans.
There are probably others on the board who have had similar experiences in Virginia.
In any case in any approach to anything involving people especially systems/organizations/agencies consisting of people, you need to know your adversary, then know the right approach. The wrong approach for any situation always backfires. That's why it's good to get ideas.