Read more here:
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Kentucky's Medicaid Asks for Funding for Substance-abuse Treatment
Read more here:
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Criminalization of People with Mental Illness, Viewpoints: Cuts to mental health programs shift burden to law enforcement
In the US, a person is much more likely to be arrested and sent to jail for having a severe mental illness, than sent to a mental health facility. The author of this article puts it in plain English.
"Following the money, it is clear that incarcerating the seriously ill is often an easier alternative for underfunded mental health systems. Mental health treatment provided in jails and prisons is not funded by anemic mental health budgets, but instead paid for with more robust criminal justice dollars. While we are increasingly training law enforcement to better manage the severely mentally ill, we are simultaneously reducing mental health resources. This shifting of responsibility for the care of the mentally ill toward law enforcement and away from mental health systems is inappropriate, unjust and promotes the criminalization of this susceptible population.
Friday, January 27, 2012
The Criminal Defense Role: Our Part, And The Help We Need in Kentucky:
Friday, January 20, 2012
Government survey finds that 5 percent of Americans suffer from a ‘serious mental illness’
"As advocates, we find the implications of this message troubling.
“Mental illness” is a big umbrella that covers everything from mild, transient mental health issues to disabling brain disease. To the degree that all of these are homogenized into one giant garden-variety health complaint akin to, say, high blood pressure, policy makers find still another excuse to ignore the treatment needs of those who are most severely ill. After all, if the country is perking along just fine when 20% of its population is mentally ill, what’s the problem!?! (Or … if mental illness is such a widespread problem, there’s no hope in addressing it so why bother?)" To read more click here:
Washington Post
About 20 percent of American adults suffer some sort of mental illness each year, and about 5 percent experience a serious disorder that disrupts work, family or social life, according to a government report released Thursday.
The annual National Survey on Drug Use and Health sketches a now-familiar picture of a country where mental illness is common and the demand for treatment high.
Mental illness is most prevalent in women, young adults, the unemployed and people with low incomes. Drug and alcohol abuse is more than twice as common in people with mental illness than those without it. About 4 percent of adults contemplate suicide each year.
According to the study, slightly less than half the people with any mental illness — and only 60 percent of those with serious, disabling ones — get treatment each year. Whites and Native Americans are more likely to get treatment than blacks, Hispanics or Asians.
To continue reading this article click here:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/government-survey-finds-that-5-percent-of-americans-suffer-from-a-serious-mental-illness/2012/01/18/gIQAjp5h9P_story.html
Monday, January 2, 2012
Op-Ed: Find state funds for mental health care that works

Lexington Herald Leader Jan 2, 2012
Posted: 12:00am on Jan 2, 2012; Modified: 1:38am on Jan 2, 2012
By: GG Burns
A home, effective treatment and a chance to contribute to the greater good — that's what it takes to recover from mental illness.
2012-01-02T06:38:48ZAgainst the odds, people rebuild their lives after the devastation of illnesses like bipolar disorder, schizophrenia or depression, but finding effective treatment and wraparound services is key. Kentucky has some outstanding programs, but the dollars haven't increased since 1995. In fact, the dollars have shifted to the justice system.
Thanks to professional support, self-determination and a safe home managed by New Beginnings Bluegrass Inc., many people are on the road to recovery. New Beginnings, a non-profit agency, supplies housing and support services in Fayette County for people diagnosed with mental illness. From New Beginnings' success rates, we can learn how housing and treatment work and assist individuals to become productive citizens.
Consider the example of Peg. For more than 20 years, she survived a hellish existence trapped in the revolving door of jail, homelessness and hospitalizations. Now she is living a rewarding and independent life surrounded by friends, her pet and a support system, which includes treatment from the Bluegrass Mental Health-Mental Retardation Board. Today, Peg regularly gives back to the community by volunteering at Saint Joseph Hospital, her church and the National Alliance on Mental Illness.
According to a recent report by NAMI, Kentucky maintained state spending for non-Medicaid mental health services from 2009 to 2011. However, the state still shortchanges mental health, ranking 46th nationally in per capita spending. Nationwide, cuts in 2012 totaled $1.6 billion. NAMI appreciates the efforts of Gov. Steve Beshear and the Kentucky legislature to maintain the mental health safety net, but in this distressed economy, more people than ever need help.
The NAMI report "State Mental Health Cuts: The continuing crisis" (www.nami.org/budgetcuts) describes threats to Medicaid, the largest payer for public mental health services. Following the loss in June 2011 of "enhanced" federal Medicaid matching funds, part of economic stimulus legislation, Kentucky's budget was squeezed by an estimated $159 million.
To meet fiscal challenges, Kentucky Medicaid is moving to a managed-care approach where the state pays a set "capitation rate" for every person enrolled in Medicaid. NAMI is worried. Kentucky is saving money by contracting with for-profit, managed-care companies, but does this just push the problem downstream? Will community mental health providers be squeezed to enable the for-profit companies to meet the terms of the contract?
Lack of mental health funding leads many who don't get the care they desperately need to fall into the criminal justice system. According to a recent report from Clinical Psychiatry-News, more than 800,000 people with severe mental illness are jailed annually in the United States.
Mental illness is a disease, not a crime. It is wrong to allow the criminal justice system to be the default mental health safety net simply because we don't have the will to adequately fund mental health services.
The Kentucky Department of Public Advocacy reports that a large percentage of its clients appear to be suffering with some form of mental illness. This illness can take the form where the person is not competent to stand trial, or was not well enough at the time of an event to appreciate the criminality of the actions. Further, many clients still suffer from mental illnesses, but those illnesses do not qualify under the legal definition of insanity. However, their mental illness can many times explain the criminal action. Also, the Kentucky Department of Corrections runs a separate psychiatric facility in La Grange for offenders with mental illness.
On average, it costs taxpayers from $16,000 to more than $30,000 a year to house an inmate in a Kentucky prison.
Ginny Vicini, executive director for New Beginnings, reports that 40 percent of the people in its program had a history of incarcerations before moving into New Beginnings. In the past three years, none have been reincarcerated.
While best practices exist in some regions, the lack of adequate funding continues to plague operations. Efforts to spread good models to more communities are on hold.
Kentucky needs to strengthen effective mental health programs. People's lives hang in the balance. We have moved from de-institutionalization in the 1970s, to trans-institutionalization today. How humane is it to allow lives to be wasted in prisons instead of funding Kentucky's mental health budget?
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GG Burns of Lexington, is an artist and mental health advocate for the National Alliance on Mental Illness Kentucky. She volunteers as the NAMI State Advocacy Network Representative
and is the Founder of: Change Mental Health Laws in Kentucky Blog
Monday, December 26, 2011
Grappling with mental health's most vexing question: Who is dangerous? What is Imminent Danger?
If we are going to sincerely respect the dignity of ALL LIFE, the laws and treatment of individuals with severe and persistent mental illness. our laws NEED Changing for both the health and safety of the severely mentally ill and for everyone.
Forty years ago, a new legal standard for commitment rose from a Milwaukee lawsuit to become the law of the land. It has proved to be tragically inadequate.
Click here to view the documentary:
Stories of how the system has failed, and what we can do about it.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
An Expert on Recovery ~ living a life to its fullest with a mental illness
Several years ago, Harold and I discussed my creating a website to help educate people about Assisted Outpatient Treatment, AOT. We talked about how some people who are surviving mental illness do not understand the need for AOT. One of the biggest misconceptions of AOT is that individuals are going to be forced to do something against their will. My conclusion regarding AOT is the lack of accessibility to housing, treatment and other resources for persons with mental illness, result in homelessness, incarceration or death. Harold's response was, "If I had not received assistance in the beginning of my journey, I would not be where I am today." Harold supports helping others learn more about the need for AOT in Kentucky.
My question to others who oppose AOT: Is it more humane to help a person over the bridge ... so they can gain access to "recovery" ... or allow them to waste their life? Read Harold's story and you decide. GG Burns, KY Mental Health Advocate
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My name is H

Twenty-nine years ago, shackled like a wild animal, I was brought to the second oldest psychiatric hospital in the United States. The name of the hospital was Eastern State Hospital (ESH) in Lexington, Kentucky. I was in the throes of my first manic episode. I had lost control of my behavior, was in constant trouble and had even been arrested. It was like living in a horrible nightmare and I did not understand what was happening.
Since that time I have been hospitalized 9 times for manic episodes of bipolar disorder. Bipolar disorder is a chronic brain disease like diabetes, lupus or cardiovascular disease. It can start at anytime in a person's life and is a lifelong illness. It is not curable but is treatable with medications and psychotherapy. Many famous people live with bipolar disorder and have productive and successful lives. All those years ago I was too sick to understand that I even had an illness. I felt trapped. No one understood my situation.
In 1986 I found myself being transported, handcuffed, in the back of a police car again. Now I was homeless. What would I do? After 3 months I was discharged from ESH and went to a boarding home where I lived for over a year. It was just one small room but it was better than living in a cardboard box. During this time I often thought of suicide and wanted to end my miserable existence. I was depressed and lonely. I wanted to die to escape my pain. At times I was so horrified by the turmoil going on in my mind that I was not capable of seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. I had no hope. It was very challenging living in a large city, being so young, and dealing with a major mental illness with so few supports.
I finally decided to stay in treatment and realized that it was important to find the right medications. I tried living alone and on my own in an efficiency apartment for about a month. Later, I lived with roommates in a house owned by Mrs. Cruse. Attending individual therapy classes and having the support of Mrs. Cruse was a crucial turning point in my life. Later a counselor who worked at the Hope Center helped me find a job at Kroger. Next I moved into a supervised apartment program (SAP). I graduated from many programs because I wanted to get well. I hated being locked up, so I had to find a better way to live. The revolving door was not for me.
Had it not been for these programs and the assistance of people who believed in me, I might still be homeless today. Individual therapy helped me overcome my anxiety, my anger and other emotional challenges. It has all been worth it because I now feel relaxed and comfortable around people. I can now express my own personality. It feels so good.
Fast forward to 2011. My recovery has been an incredible journey; one full of many twists and turns. With the help of medications and therapy I have learned to live with a brain disorder. I know how to stay out of the hospital and have become a productive member of society. I always take my medicine and especially get enough sleep. I knew I needed to take responsibility for myself. I had dreams and told myself that I could never give up. I realized that I had to work hard and no one could do it for me.
Many people refuse to take medication for bipolar disorder due to excessive weight gain. I went to Weight Watchers® and learned how to eat healthy. I lost 40 pounds and know how to keep it off. I am a 19-month free lifetime member of the Weight Watchers program. I also smoked heavily for 13 years. With the help of the Cooper Clayton Method, I have not smoked in the past 16 years.
I feel so blessed every day. I have come a million miles in learning about my own recovery. One of my most proud accomplishments is that I have been hospitalized only once in the last nineteen years. I love my life and feel happy, productive and am glad to share my story with others. I do not drink alcohol or use drugs, but I do love to party. I am high on life and who needs more? I have worked at Kroger for 22 years and my financial situation is sound. The best part of my life is my wonderful wife, Angel. We have been married for 12 years. She is my angel! Her love and support mean everything to me. We just purchased our first home and really enjoy being homeowners.
I have learned the importance of giving back. I visit and give gifts to the elderly, cook special dishes for friends and volunteer as a photographer for a non-profit organization called the National Alliance on Mental Illness, (NAMI). I am also very honored to serve on the NAMI Lexington board, the past 3 years.
I am happy, optimistic, enthusiastic, energetic and confident about my future.

My dream is for our society to accept that mental illness is just like other diseases. People diagnosed with mental illness are just like me. We are not a "mentally ill man" or a "schizophrenic woman." We would never label a person dying of cancer as a "cancerous" man or woman. My dream is for everyone who has a mental illness to be able to access treatment and housing, as I have been blessed to do. It seems horrible to know that now more people with mental illnesses live in jails and prisons than in other places.
Recovery is a life long journey, but it is possible.
My motto is: "Every day is a holiday, every meal is a feast and every night is New Year's Eve." We all need to work together to overcome the stigma of mental illness.
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Published and produced by friends of the: Change Mental Health Laws in Kentucky Project, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED!