Friday, January 31, 2014

Consumer Advocate discusses AOT, HR 3717 and the need for advocates join efforts - not argue

Frustrated Consumer, Parent, and Advocate!


BLOGGER AMY HELLMAN
Mental Health in America is Lacking
It’s frustrating to read daily about the split among the “advocates” for mental health care in the United States.
The sad thing I see happening is that we need a full and comprehensive system of care for mental health and we don’t have that. Some consumers are “high functioning” and some consumers are unable to function at all. America needs a system that addresses all the people with mental health needs and a system that is able to address mental health needs on any part of the spectrum, depending on the needs of the person.

Court-ordered Treatment
AOT is a good treatment option. In my home state of Minnesota, the courts regularly court order people  to drug and alcohol treatment, and to psychiatric treatment if the court deems it necessary. Is Minnesota way ahead of the game? Minnesota courts have been doing this for a good 20 years. It works, again, as another viable treatment option. Not everyone needs a court order but some people do.
I know many people who were court ordered into various treatments and court-ordered treatment worked for them. They didn’t realize they had a drug or alcohol problem until they began learning about their disease of addiction  in their court ordered treatment. In chemical dependency treatment, one may also discover that they have an underlying mental health issue. They would deal with their needs in mental health also.
I have seen the same results with court ordered psychiatric treatment. It’s a tool to help those who need the help. First you do a psychiatric assessment and from that assessment, you find out if you in fact live with a mental health diagnosis. Learning about your mental health diagnosis and how to treat it is one of the very rewarding lessons that come from court-ordered treatment. Education and treatment works to help people towards recovery.

Please read more here as Amy describes how AOT works in Minnesota, the value of Peer Specialist and also the need to support HR 3717. 

With CNN's Jake Tapper, Murphy Describes Mental Health System as "embarr...

Monday, January 27, 2014

Another 60 Minutes Report: "We can do a better job" ~ Scott Pelley

WATCH VIDEO HERE:
It's Time to Help Tennessee Families in Mental Health Crisis!: A 60 Minutes Report: Nowhere to Go: Mentally ill youth in crisis Scott Pelley reports on severe shortcomings in the state of mental health care for young people

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Va. state senator stabbed by son: "The system failed" -- my response to Scott Pelley

Dear Scott Pelley of CBS NEWS,

Thanks you for sharing the truth about Senator Deeds and his son Gus.


Sadly, hundreds of stories about family members with serious psychiatric disorders/brain diseases hurt or kill their family member each day and the public rarely hears about these tragedies, unless the victim is famous or the tragedy takes place in a school.


As a Mother of young man who has struggled with psychiatric diagnoses most of his life and has been involuntary admitted 12 times for symptoms of my brain disease … my heart goes out to Senator Deeds, to Gus’s Mother and their entire family.


However, my letter is to you Mr. Pelly and to the news team at CBS/60-Minutes. In your segment, there was no mention of the 40-50% of young 'adults' who lack insight to their illness and refuse treatment — due to a symptom called anosognosia.



According to Treatment Advocacy Center: Anosognosia - "lack of insight" or "lack of awareness" - is believed to be the single largest reason why individuals with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder do not take their medications. A result of anatomical damage to the brain, it affects approximately 50% of individuals with schizophrenia and 40% of individuals with bipolar disorder.


In this segment, you only discussed the fact there is a shortage of psych beds and psychiatrist in most states! Yes it is true that 4.2 billion dollars that has been cut from states behavioral health budgets since 2008, but you made no reference on how these funds are now absorbed in the states Department of Corrections budget or the Dept. of Justice.

A 2006 study by the Bureau of Justice Statistics found that over half of all jail and prison inmates have mental health issues; an estimated 1.25 million suffered from mental illness, over four times the number in 1998


For many of us ‘families in crises', it would not matter if psych beds are available and resources/outpatient programs are abundant … our loved ones will continue to refuse treatment unless ‘commitment laws’ change at the state and national level.

Families in mental health crises face unthinkable challenges! When our loved ones threaten violence, medical professionals and the police encourage us to file restraining orders, hoping the ‘legal process’ will prevent tragedy – but instead of treatment this process leads to homelessness and jail – not medical treatment! The current system sets up young adults to fail, with a criminal record that prevents future employment and access to housing. For families like mine, there is nothing worse than depending on the police to be our emergency medial providers. In some cases, our calls for help can end deadly!

Finally there is a glimmer of hope to our hell!


Representative Tim Murphy, (PA-R) recently sponsored the “Helping Families In Mental Health Crisis Act (H.R. 3717), a bill that will unravel a broken system and addresses barriers to treatment for those who need it the most.


H.R. 3717 includes provisions for states to support Assisted Outpatient Treatment, (AOT), which reduce hospitalizations, homelessness, incarcerations and victimization. It will remove barriers such as HIPPA handcuffs and will clear federal bureaucracy that enables hospitals from having acute care psychiatric beds. It will authorize BRAIN research initiative at the National Institute of Mental Health, establish Department Of Justice Reforms, and create mental health courts so patients are treated in the healthcare system and not warehoused in jails, and much more.


Families across the US are living in crises – with no voice. WE NEED YOUR HELP.


Please continue to produce segments on 'families in crises' and updates about Senator Deeds. But please mention there national legislation (H.R. 3717) that can help us.


~ A Mom who lives in the nightmare of a broken mental health system!

_________________________________ 
BySCOTT PELLEY  CBS NEWS January 23, 2014, 7: 16 PM

It was a shock last November when a Virginia state senator was slashed in the face and stabbed by his son. In an interview for "60 Minutes," Sen. Creigh Deeds speaks  for the first time on television about the attack and what he sees as acritical failure in mental health care - a failure that ended in the death of his 24-year-old son, Gus.


creigh_deeds.jpg
Creigh Deeds
 CBS NEWS
 "I really don’t want Gus to be defined by his illness," Deeds says. "I don't want Gus to be defined by what happened on the 19th. Gus was a great kid. He was a perfect son. It's clear the system failed. It's clear that it failed Gus. It killed Gus."

Thank you for Sharing with the world the story of Senator Deeds and his son gus. 

Read more here: 



http://www.cbsnews.com/news/virginia-state-sen-creigh-deeds-its-clear-the-system-failed/



Slain Conn. Woman Sought Psychiatric Care for Son


"Statistically, individuals with severe psychiatric disorders/brain diseases, are far more likely to kill family members than anyone else. Yet deaths of these 'Mothers/Dads' rarely made the headlines. If Adam Lanza had merely killed his mother, we would never have heard of him!  We, the family members, are pushed into duty as America's first line of defense against those 'who have the civil rights to become dangerous and we are often hurt 'or die' in the line of battle!  
A Mom who knows what it's like to be terrorized and threatened by her own son who has the 'right' to refuse treatment." 
Margaret Rohner worried about her troubled adult son not taking his psychiatric medications and told a friend he needed to be hospitalized. But she was eager to see him over Christmas and, despite earlier reservations, agreed to let him come to her home to open presents and spend the night.
The day after Christmas, the 45-year-old Rohner was viciously attacked with a fireplace poker and knife, her eviscerated body left in the living room of her Deep River home. Her 23-year-old son, Robert O. Rankin, was charged with murder.
It was a tragic end for a woman who had spent years trying to find appropriate care for her son, known as Bobby. Friends say she shepherded him through numerous hospitalizations, changing medications and doctors, and various treatment programs for his mental illness, seemingly to no avail. All the while, friends said Rohner, a recent breast cancer survivor, would bear the brunt of Bobby's angry rants, holding out hope that her only child's condition would improve.
"He was in and out of that system for four years, and all we ended up with was a disaster, a tragedy," Robert Rankin Jr., Rohner's former husband and Bobby's father, said in an interview with The Associated Press. Rankin said his son has been diagnosed with a form of schizophrenia.
The case highlights many of the issues state policymakers have been wrestling with in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting by 20-year-old Adam Lanza, who killed his mother before gunning down 20 first-graders and six educators on Dec. 14, 2012. One task force is compiling recommendations for legislators to consider regarding mental health services for patients ages 16 to 25. State Sen. Dante Bartolomeo, who has pushed for improved mental health services for children, said one challenge for young people with psychiatric problems is that once they become adults, treatment is generally voluntary and "medication compliance does become a problem."


Wednesday, January 22, 2014

What Kentucky can learn from Laura's Law and the tragic death of Kelly Thomas!

"Some in Lexington and supporters of the HOPE Center may remember A Night of Hope with The Soloist author Steve Lopez, a few years ago. Steven was guest of honor, promoting his book 'The Soloist' and sharing stories about “Nathaniel Anthony Ayers” 
Steven wrote this story in the LA Times about how he hopes that Kelly Thomas’s death will inspire CA to fully implement Laura’s Law – AOT. Kentucky should learn from by the tragedies that have unfolded in other states. We can avoid similar senseless tragedies by supporting SB 50 in 2014. "
 

Law could be Kelly Thomas' legacy


The death of a mentally ill homeless man could give Orange County authorities incentive to approve Laura's Law, which allows court-ordered treatment.



January 21, 20148:08 p.m.










It's hard for me to even think about the horrific way in which Kelly Thomas died. I know too many people like him - lost, sick, disoriented souls who, through no fault of their own, have been hit with a disease that puts them in peril.

Not guilty, came the verdict last week. The two Fullerton police officers caught on camera viciously beating Thomas in 2011 were acquitted of criminal wrongdoing in his death.

Whether you agree or disagree with the jury, there's plenty of guilt to go around. And either we haven't learned any lessons from Thomas' death, or we haven't acted on what we've learned.


 in News

"Why was Kelly given a death sentence? Because he was mentally ill, disheveled, unmedicated and in public," said Carla Jacobs, a mental health advocate in Orange County. She said she has heard from families afraid to call the police when their loved ones are in distress for fear of having them become the next Kelly Thomas.

"The reality," Jacobs said, "is that our mental health system is complicit in Kelly's death. It is not geared to protect those with the most serious illness, keep them off the streets and out of cops' purview."


Laura's Law is controversial, but many frustrated families, who despite their best efforts can't help seriously ill loved ones, believe it could literally be a life saver in some cases.

But the law is aimed at only a small segment of the afflicted population, and there is still a critical shortage of services we know can work for the rest of those with serious mental disorders - outreach, intervention and supportive housing.


Ron Thomas, the father Kelly called for while being beaten unconscious, is distraught by last week's verdict but is as determined as ever to see public policy changes in his son's memory.


A former Orange County sheriff's deputy, Thomas told me he welcomes implementation of Laura's Law, but he wants more. He wants disciplinary action against police officers to be made public, so violence-prone cops can be weeded out. And he believes, as does Jacobs, that there should be mandatory mental health training for all peace officers.


"I think there should be in-depth training for dealing with the homeless and mentally ill, and it should start in the academy and be part of post-certification," Thomas said. "And I think it needs to be followed up with continuous training, the way they do with firearms."

Read more here: http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-lopez-kelly-20140121,0,5218519.column#ixzz2rCddkV00




Tuesday, January 21, 2014

NPR looks into the mentally ill in jail -- we can do better than this!

Cook County Jail inmates head off to bond court after being screened for mental illness. If they then don't get released, the jail will separate the mentally ill from the other inmates.

Mentally Ill Are Often Locked Up In Jails That Can't Help

Click this link to read/listen to the story on NPR

I can't conceive of anything more ridiculously stupid by government than to do what we're doing right now.

"Clearly, our society had determined that the state-run mental hospitals were abhorrent, that, my God, our society cannot tolerate this, we're much more advanced than that," Dart says. "I just find the irony so thick that that same society finds it OK to put the same people in jails and prisons."  ~ Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart

Monday, January 20, 2014

Help us take down the walls associated with serious brain disease, by passing HR 3717

People build walls that must be torn down in order for change to occur. The discrimination against individuals coping with serious brain diseases has gone on long enough! In Pippa Abston's recent blog posting, she explains why we must follow in Dr. King's footsteps to tear down these walls. We must all work together to block these barriers and one common sense solution is HR3717: Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act. 
The time is now to act -- it is the right thing to do. 
Re-posted with permission from Pippa Abston

Serious Brain Illness: We Can Tear Down This Wall

JANUARY 20, 2014 
BY:  Pippa Abston
Today, on the birthday of Dr. King, what will you do to honor his memory?  I took some time to think about the particular essence of the work he took up, the work that never gets completed and is always necessary.  I’d like to suggest there are two basic elements of that work.  First, we must always bear witness to our shared wrongdoing, by naming and calling out the human-made class, habit and stereotype driven barriers to human potential; and second, we must just as vigorously speak of our capacity for something better, offering each other enlivening glimpses of the possible future, through the yet-to-be torn down walls.
The barrier I want to call out to you today is the one we’ve created for those with serious brain illnesses like schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders.  We didn’t cause these brain illnesses, as best we can tell— they present their own barrier, for sure, but that’s not the one I’m naming. 
The barrier I mean is our special singling out of humans with life-threatening brain illnesses to be left largely without treatment, ignored and even criminalized.   If you watch this video of a man with schizophrenia, homeless due to his illness, being beaten to death by police instead of given desperately needed treatment, and you then learn his killing was not found criminal by a jury, you can see what our created barrier has done.
I had a hard time watching that.  I had to do it in pieces.  I said I wasn’t going to watch, because my imagination was painful enough, and because nothing about this event is actually new or unusual, and because I am a caregiver for a young adult with this same illness, and because I didn’t need another reason to cry about what is happening to sick people.  Lots of excuses, but bearing witness means we have to watch the hard parts.
Now you can take a breath, and I’d like to offer the second half, a glimpse of a future where we tear down the barriers to treatment we have built.  We made them:  we can take them down. 
We haven’t seen substantial national legislative effort to do anything until recently, with the Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act.  Representative Tim Murphy, a psychologist, has put forth a game-changing bill that would go a long way towards allowing people with serious brain illnesses to live safely and with dignity in their communities, instead of being consigned to homelessness, jail, and early death.  I have read and thought about the bill in entirety (there are links in the site above).  I endorse it strongly. I am contacting my legislators to request their support.  I believe it will do some work that seriously needs doing.  That’s my short version.  If you’d like to know a few more specifics, please read on and also see discussion of the bill here.  If there are questions not addressed, please let me know and I’ll try to get an answer for you.
Quick Summary of HR3717: Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act
This bill would restructure administration of planning and funding at the federal level in a shift towards known to be effective policy and an evidence-based approach to evaluating programs.  Focus would be put on services allowing persons with serious brain illness to stay in their communities while being effectively treated.  Specific parts of HIPAA (health information privacy law) would be modified to allow caregivers to know information necessary to health and safety. 
I have seen criticism of the bill from advocates with milder brain illnesses who fear mandatory treatment would be forced upon them or that choice would be removed from those who have done, as is typically said “nothing wrong besides being mentally ill and homeless.”  I can certainly understand why someone with a mild illness would extrapolate the same ability to think and reason clearly to someone more severely affected and be concerned about the ill person’s freedom.  Indeed, we all might do well to have the level of concern necessary to monitor treatment programs and legal action from misuse.  There will always be a gray zone where assessment of competency to make decisions is uncertain.  On the other hand, we don’t quit giving antibiotics to patients with meningitis just because they are used wrongly for viral illnesses. We don’t shut down hospitals that are needed but are not functioning well, because we still need somewhere to go when we have heart attacks—we fix them. Wait, we DID do that…but only for brain illnesses.
Reading this bill, I would say that if an error has been made, it appears more likely in the direction of slightly undertreating, due to long-standing fears of overcalling brain illness.  The gray zone has been largely excluded. Only those with the most severe psychotic illnesses are addressed by the bill, and some will still be left out in the effort to preserve rights.  Breaking down a barrier takes time and sometimes has to be done stepwise.
As I’ve discussed in prior blogs, those with severe brain illness often present with anosognosia—inability to recognize their illness.  Rational thought is lost due to the illness itself, which renders the choice of treatment or not meaningless to the person.  Paradoxically, mandatory treatment can sometimes restore thinking ability to the point of competency.  Even when that doesn’t happen, treatment increases the chance substantially that the person will be able to live in the community and enjoy the normal rights and potentials the rest of us enjoy.  A person having a stroke will be treated, even though he can’t ask for help.  A person with severe brain illness, whose illness steals his ability to understand why help is needed, is not treated because he doesn’t ask.  Both must be treated in order to access their ordinary civil rights.
Funds Currently Misdirected
SAMHSA, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, would come under direction of a new office, the Assistant Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders, as part of the Department of Health and Human Services.  This person would have to be an actual psychiatrist or psychologist with research and clinical experience.  A National Mental Health Policy Laboratory would consult with the National Institute of Mental Health to identify evidence-based policy, implement it, and monitor outcomes.  An interagency coordinating committee would work to integrate all federal work on mental illness and would include representatives affected by brain illness under treatment, family members, and advocates.  Professional peer review would be required for all grants and proposals.
At present, SAMHSA is not administering available funds in a targeted, evidence-based manner.  Priority is not being given to those with the most severe though treatable illnesses and is being distributed to various fluff grants instead.  Sometimes redesigning administrative functions is just window dressing.  And sometimes, that is the only way to shake things up enough to change them.
A few years ago, I was offered a chance to attend a SAMHSA funded training session for healthcare providers on substance abuse screening.  Because I was in the process of helping a group of pediatricians in my state select a screening tool for teens, I registered, hoping I would learn more about how to use the tool.  I had a paid trip to Miami, where I stayed in a fancier hotel than I would ever manage on my own, for a 2 day session targeted primarily at screening and motivational interviewing for basically well people.  Instead of focusing on how we could work with patients ill with serious addiction, the thrust was on how anything more than 1 drink a night for women or 2 for men could be a health risk and how we could help people quit doing that.  Addiction was normalized and thus forgotten.  How many people could have undergone actual treatment for the funds taken to do that conference?  If the restructuring frees up funds to be used well, we can afford to do so much more.  Throwing money at a problem definitely doesn’t solve it when so much goes in the storm drain or gets blown away—aiming and directing money at a solution works much better.
Redirecting Funds: What is AOT?
There would be 50 grants available to establish new Assisted Outpatient Treatment programs (AOT).  AOT is an evidence based therapy to provide monitored treatment of brain illness in an outpatient, community setting.  The requirements are stringent—only those who are not able to provide for their own basic needs due to brain illness, who are likely to substantially deteriorate without treatment, who lack the capacity to make decisions, who have a history of violence, incarceration due to illness or repeated hospitalizations due to non-adherence with treatment, or who present a danger to self or others would be included.  AOT has been determined constitutional in court.  Typically outpatient commitment is ordered for a one year period and can be renewed, but only if the same conditions are still met.  At the court hearings for commitment to AOT, the patient would have legal representation and could give testimony.  No permanent or longstanding sentence is imposed.   If a year seems long, remember illnesses this severe and chronic are not likely to be going away.  And prison sentences for untreated persons are often far longer.
This does not mean the eccentric guy who puts out funky lawn ornaments is going to be held down and given a shot.  It does not mean every person who hears voices, or mumbles to herself in the grocery store, or is disheveled, or preaches on the street corner is going to be picked up by police.  Forget what you’ve heard about mental illness being so common and ordinary—it is not, not the kind covered by this bill.  We don’t have the money to do that kind of thing anyway.
The bill would increase funding for the most serious forms of brain illness and specifically devote a portion to illnesses associated with violent acts, in effort to find more effective treatments.  It would provide for education in schools on signs of brain illness and how to respond.  It would extend meaningful use funding for electronic health records to psychiatric facilities.  Liability protection would be extended to qualified volunteer physicians at outpatient psychiatric clinics.  Funding would be put into suicide prevention programs.
The bill would give grants to establish telepsychiatry programs and train primary care doctors to work in collaboration with psychiatrists.  It would give planning grants to 10 states to establish Federally Qualified Behavioral Health Clinics, which would be required to include child and adolescent trained psychiatrists and staff, training in dual diagnosis (addiction plus another brain illness), rehabilitation services, peer support, and supported education/ employment.   It would fund training for first responders to recognize brain illness and act appropriately to avoid killing the person they need to help or being killed themselves.  It would strengthen funding for mental health courts and veterans’ treatment courts.  It would protect medications from exclusion from state Medicaid formularies.  It would fund inpatient and residential treatment for those on public insurance between age 21 and 65.
Please contact your Rep in Congress and ask them to co-sponsor Rep. Murphy's HB 3717/Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act. 

The fastest way to find your Rep phone number is to enter your zip code at:  http://www.opencongress.org/people/zipcodelookup