Services » Capacity Assessments
Psychiatric Capacity Assessments You Can Rely On
Refer your next capacity case to PsycIME — where legal clarity meets psychiatric integrity
We deliver court-ready psychiatric capacity assessments that determine an individual’s ability to make informed decisions regarding personal care, health treatment, finances, property, and legal matters. Our psychiatrist-led evaluations are designed to withstand scrutiny in high-stakes contexts such as power of attorney activation, guardianship, consent to treatment, and estate litigation.
📧 info@psycime.com | ☎ 519-341-6176
Why Refer to PsycIME for Capacity Assessments
1. Psychiatrist-Led Expertise
- Every assessment is conducted or reviewed by licensed psychiatrists with specialized training in forensic and geriatric psychiatry.
- We evaluate cognitive function, psychiatric conditions, risk of undue influence, and functional capacity using standardized, evidence-based tools.
2. Legally Aligned Evaluations
- Our assessments comply with provincial legal frameworks such as Ontario’s Substitute Decisions Act, BC’s Representation Agreement Act, and relevant legislation in Alberta, Quebec, and Atlantic Canada.
- We clearly address whether the individual is capable, incapable, or capable with supports, and explain how impairments affect decision-making domains.
3. Secure, Structured Reports
- PsycIME provides reports that are suitable for legal proceedings and can be used in:
- Power of attorney disputes
- Guardianship applications
- Testamentary capacity reviews
- Consent to treatment hearings
- Our reports include full reasoning, clinical documentation, and legal language alignment.
4. Timely and Accessible Across Canada
- Virtual and in-person assessments available nationwide.
- Fast report turnaround — critical when decisions are time-sensitive (e.g., discharge planning, urgent legal filings).
5. Inclusive and Culturally Competent
- PsycIME assessors are experienced with clients from diverse backgrounds.
- Multilingual assessments available in English, Hindi, Gujarati, and Cantonese, ensuring accessibility without compromising accuracy.
Who Should Refer
Lawyers (Estate, Family, Elder Law): Ensure your clients’ rights are upheld with independent, psychiatric capacity evidence.
Hospitals & Long-Term Care Homes: Assess discharge readiness, informed consent ability, and mental capacity under regulatory obligations.
Public Guardians & Government Agencies: Obtain credible expert opinions in complex capacity, neglect, or abuse cases.
Insurance & Disability Case Managers: Validate decision-making ability in claims, benefits, or life planning contexts.
Top Reasons to Believe:
- Assessments aligned with provincial laws (e.g., Substitute Decisions Act).
- Geriatric and forensic psychiatric expertise for high-risk cases.
- Reports clarify capacity vs. incapacity across legal thresholds.
- Trusted by lawyers, public guardians, and families across Canada.
- Comprehensive evaluation of psychiatric conditions affecting work capacity
- We provide detailed treatment recommendations to optimize recovery
- Regular reassessment protocols to track improvement
Common Questions in Capacity Assessments
- Can the individual understand and appreciate the consequences of their decisions?
- Is their ability impaired by dementia, psychosis, depression, or cognitive decline?
- Are they vulnerable to coercion or manipulation?
- Are they legally competent to execute documents (e.g., POAs, wills)?
Ontario
The Capacity Assessment Form 4 in Ontario is used to document an official evaluation of an individual’s decision-making abilities.
British Columbia
A capacity assessment in British Columbia is conducted to determine if an individual can make competent legal or medical decisions.
Alberta
Alberta’s Form 4 capacity assessment is used in legal contexts to assess an adult’s mental capacity.