Abstract
Crisis Assessment and Treatment Teams (CAT Teams) were established in Victoria, Australia, in 1988 to provide crisis intervention and home treatment as an alternative to hospitalisation for the seriously mentally ill. These teams were set up to prepare for the closure of the large-scale, state-run psychiatric institutions over the following decade. Increasingly, concerns are being expressed in the media over the failure of the new community-based services to provide adequate care and protection to the mentally ill. This paper offers a preliminary attempt to make sociological sense of one such aspect of deinstitutionalisation, the major changes that have occurred in the practice and delivery of CAT Team services since inception. I suggest that a shift has taken place from a therapeutic consciousness, centred on providing home treatment, to a risk consciousness, centred on protocols to evaluate and document a client’s ‘risk factors’. Drawing on my personal experiences as a clinician in a Melbourne-based CAT Team since 1991, I probe these changes through the lens of sociology. In so doing, I utilise several insights from Nikolas Rose’s (1998) analysis of risk as a foundation for social intervention.