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If you don't watch the show and might don't read on. It has spoilers and the show is good.
Chuck McGill suffers from a delusional with strong psychosomatic sx that he's allergic to EM fields. This condition does exist though the amount of people who have it is so rare it's not taught in conventional psychiatric training. People since the emergence of wifi claimed it caused them to have problems such as headaches, memory lapses, nausea, etc. Turned out when these people were placed in magnetically shielded rooms and told to be able to tell if an electronic device was off or on (by being asked if they had side effects) there was no correlation with the device. Further in other cases where people c/o of say a cell phone tower giving them health problems, it turned out the cell-phone tower was not operational for months.
Due to Chuck's delusion he confines himself to his home, keeps everything shut off, and wears a blanket of aluminum thermal wrap believing it protects him from EM waves.
In the last few episodes of season 3 Chuck suffers a psychosomatic syncopal episode and falls and hits his head. He's brought to the hospital and refuses any interventions involving electricity such as a CT scan, an EKG, being hooked up to a vital signs machine but because he seems so delusional the hospital staff ignore him and do it anyway.
So the big question. Did Chuck have capacity to refuse? He's brilliant, in full command of his cognition, memory, he's a highly educated, Ivy-League trained lawyer who has argued cases in front of the highest courts in the country and he's refusing intervention based on a delusional belief that he has an EM wave allergy. (So seems like he doesn't have capacity)
But that delusional belief causes him to have real psychosomatic sx that are so bad he could go into panic attacks, syncope, even catatonia in 2 occasions where he was placed in a state of high anxiety for extended durations. Despite that the psychosomatic problems are based on delusion the psychosomatic sx are real. (So does that mean he has capacity?)
Chuck McGill suffers from a delusional with strong psychosomatic sx that he's allergic to EM fields. This condition does exist though the amount of people who have it is so rare it's not taught in conventional psychiatric training. People since the emergence of wifi claimed it caused them to have problems such as headaches, memory lapses, nausea, etc. Turned out when these people were placed in magnetically shielded rooms and told to be able to tell if an electronic device was off or on (by being asked if they had side effects) there was no correlation with the device. Further in other cases where people c/o of say a cell phone tower giving them health problems, it turned out the cell-phone tower was not operational for months.
Due to Chuck's delusion he confines himself to his home, keeps everything shut off, and wears a blanket of aluminum thermal wrap believing it protects him from EM waves.
In the last few episodes of season 3 Chuck suffers a psychosomatic syncopal episode and falls and hits his head. He's brought to the hospital and refuses any interventions involving electricity such as a CT scan, an EKG, being hooked up to a vital signs machine but because he seems so delusional the hospital staff ignore him and do it anyway.
So the big question. Did Chuck have capacity to refuse? He's brilliant, in full command of his cognition, memory, he's a highly educated, Ivy-League trained lawyer who has argued cases in front of the highest courts in the country and he's refusing intervention based on a delusional belief that he has an EM wave allergy. (So seems like he doesn't have capacity)
But that delusional belief causes him to have real psychosomatic sx that are so bad he could go into panic attacks, syncope, even catatonia in 2 occasions where he was placed in a state of high anxiety for extended durations. Despite that the psychosomatic problems are based on delusion the psychosomatic sx are real. (So does that mean he has capacity?)
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