Sunday, February 13, 2011

Steps to Keep the Mentally Ill from Buying Guns

Posted: 12:00am on Feb 13, 2011


For an alienated and unbalanced young college student, chronic misery is fast spiraling into violent desperation.

In the classroom, he laughs with no cause, stares, expounds bizarre numerological theories. He proclaims his college itself unconstitutional. A professor worries aloud that the young man could shoot up the classroom. When the institution finally dismisses him, he becomes still more agitated, sleepless, paranoid. He enters a Sportsman's Warehouse store and picks out a Glock 19 semi-automatic pistol.

The clerk calls in the required background check — usually cleared while the customer waits — and is told that this customer cannot buy a firearm. Officials at his college had petitioned a local judge to suspend his ability to buy a weapon, and the suspension was entered immediately into the federal database established by the Brady Bill.

A Jan. 8 "Congress on Your Corner" meeting in Tucson, Ariz., proceeds without incident.

Alas, the account above is fictional. No such procedure for preventing a mentally ill and dangerous person from buying a firearm actually exists.

On Nov. 30 of last year, Jared Loughner did purchase the pistol he used to kill six people and injure 14 others five weeks later. Three years before, Seung Hui Cho, despite a history of mandated mental health treatment, bought the Glock semiautomatic pistol that cut down 32 people at Virginia Tech University.

Despite multiple police contacts and obvious signs of mental illness, both Loughner and Cho bought their weapons legally. Clearly we need a procedure for preventing such individuals from buying firearms — the sooner, the better.

Many have blamed the Tucson disaster on a failure of the mental health system. After all, Loughner showed signs of mental disturbance and aggression so obvious and public one classmate always sat near an exit, poised to flee on the grisly day she knew was coming. Surely, the mental health system should have intervened, compelling treatment with or without his consent.

Unfortunately, in a free society, managing potentially violent mentally ill persons poses daunting legal and ethical dilemmas.

Some existing laws do attempt to balance the demands of public safety with the rights of mentally ill citizens. For example, a therapist must break confidentiality and inform the police if a client makes a direct threat against another person. Likewise, any citizen can petition a judge to authorize the involuntary hospitalization of a mentally ill person who presents a danger to self or others.

It is doubtful, however, that either of these legal options could have prevented Virginia Tech or Tucson.

Since neither Cho nor Loughner was in treatment just before the shootings, no therapist had any information to disclose. Pima Community College could have petitioned for Loughner to be hospitalized against his will. But legal standards for involuntary hospitalization require not only bizarre behavior or verbal aggression, but a clear threat of harm to self or others. It is unlikely either Cho or Loughner would have met that strict legal standard before their crimes.

The following relatively simple, twofold legal mechanism might have prevented both tragedies and a significant number of suicides, since research shows many firearm suicides are completed with newly purchased weapons:

■ Any citizen could petition a judge to suspend an apparently aggressive or suicidal person's right to buy a firearm. The potentially dangerous person would not have to be in treatment to be subject to this suspension.

■ Any licensed health care professional with reason to believe a patient posed a danger to self or others could enter an order to block firearm purchases directly into the federal database.

In either case, the affected person would have the right to challenge the suspension, via either a full psychological examination or a legal hearing.

This public safety measure seems as commonsensical as allowing a physician or a judge to suspend the license of a driver impaired by uncontrolled epilepsy or Alzheimer's disease. If you agree, spread the idea around.

It would certainly not prevent every potential tragedy, but it could buy precious time in many situations.

For some husband, wife, parent or friend, that could make the difference between a heart-rending loss and a near miss.

About the author Steven Mangine is a clinical psychologist practicing in Lexington and an adjunct faculty member in the University of Kentucky's department of psychology.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

State (of the union) of Mental Health, with Candy Crowley





Excellent program on today's CNN State of the Union. Check the website for more info and access in case you missed it. Click here to view the interviews with Pete Earley and Dr. Fred J. Frese.

Please forward this to every Federal or State public official you know. It's time to work together for change.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

NIMH · Understanding Severe Mental Illness

As we learn more about the circumstances surrounding the tragedy in Tucson, we should be working harder to ensure people with SMI receive the care they need. Early intervention offers the best hope to prevent more tragedies in the future.

For more information on SMI and other mental health statistics, please visit NIMH’s Statistics page.

Information on coping with trauma.


NIMH · Understanding Severe Mental Illness

KY's Neighboring State Needs AOT

It's time to change Tennessee's mental health laws.: Tucson Tragedy Hits Close to Home

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

The US is listening now, only because of Tragedy in Arizona


BY: GG BURNS, Kentucky Mental Health Advocate


It has been an extremely heartbreaking few days for many across the US. The senseless tragedy in Arizona has been difficult to put out of my mind. I cannot help, but think of the parents of Jared Loughner, as well as the family and friends of those who perished, or were injured in that Tucson shopping center parking lot. There has been much speculation the shooter had serious, "untreated" mental illness, ... and with that knowledge we all begin to form our own opinions. All advocates know the slippery slope here ... but here goes.

For a long time, many national Mental Health experts have written books, blog postings and news/media articles about the need to reform mental health care in the US. Additionally, the need to revise mental health laws in all 50 states is a controversial subject, especially in Kentucky.
Why?
  1. Lack of funding.
  2. Lack of services,
  3. Civil liberties,
  4. A nation of apathetic citizens who do not want to talk about mental illness.
I was once told newspapers did not want to publish positive stories of recovery and celebration from Mental Health organizations. I was told the subject of mental illnesses (which are biological brain diseases), did NOT sell newspapers! Well, tragedies from untreated mental illness does.

To revise the broken health care system, (especially the part about lack of mental health services and supports), will demand many divisions of federal, state and local governments working together. Is this impossible ~ no. Is this task too great and therefore no one seems to know where to begin ~ yes.

My expression of the week is:
I am disgusted with leaders in Kentucky saying, "the mental health system is broken and there is nothing we can do." This attitude is why Kentucky continues to receive an "F" for mental health care. We can do something about it, but we all must work together.

In the past 48 hours, hundreds of articles have been released by leading mental health experts across the nation. Every agency and organization I follow have published their views on this horrible tragedy. Sadly, these events will continue over and over until we begin to think "preventative" ... instead of "re-active", blame, then forget ... until the next time.


Below are links to some of the best articles I have read. I hope you will take the time to read them and "think" about ways we can work together to make a difference. Click on the headlines to read each article.

Please leave a comment, as I am using this blog to show support to "change mental health care laws in Kentucky". You may leave your comments anonymously.

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A Predictable Tragedy in Arizona

We emptied state mental hospitals starting in the 1960s without providing adequate treatment alternatives.

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Time to speak out, not hide!

It’s time for advocates to speak out and demand reforms!
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NAMI | The Arizona Tragedy and Mental Health Care:

Statement by Michael J. Fitzpatrick, Executive Director, National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI)

"Acts of violence are exceptional. They are a sign that something has gone terribly wrong, usually in the mental health care system."


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The shooting's true lesson

Now that someone with mental illness has shot one of Washington's own, maybe Congress will start to pay attention to its abysmal failure to provide care for the most seriously mentally-ill Americans.