I’ve been traveling for 3 weeks, busy with mental
health advocacy, and haven’t settled on a blog yet… So, when I ran across this,
I decided to just POST IT, instead of a blog…for now. #GREATNESS #Ican'tTakeCredit #JohnOliver
Mental Health:
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (monologue Oct 4, 2015):
1. Stigma:
(min: 00.20 seconds in)
Derogatory words/phrases used to talk about the mentally ill
by media and in life.
(examples: “wacko”
“psycho” “cray cray” etc.,
Cited: Dr. Harold
Schwartz, Chief Psychiatrist, Hartford Hospital
(video clip from LAST WEEK TONIGHT interview)
CONCLUSION:
*************************************************************
2. Aftermath of mass shootings, media: (min: 2:38)
Cited: Annals of Epidemiology
(The Official Journal of the American College of
Epidemiology)
May 2015 Article: Mental illness and the reduction of gun
violence and suicide: bringing
epidemiologic research to policy
Quote:
“…the large majority of people with mental disorders do not
engage in violence against others…”
And
Cited: American Journal of Public Health
Article: Mental
Illness, Mass Shooting, and the Politics of American Firearms
Quote:
“…fewer that 5% of the 120,000 gun-related killings were
perpetrated by people diagnosed with mental illness.”
And
“…adults with mental illnesses were more likely to be
victims that perpetrators of community violence.”
CONCLUSION:
It’s deeply
misleading reporting the mentally ill are violent.
********************************************************
3. Statistics/Number of mentally ill in America: (min: 3:35)
Cited: SAMHSA – Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration
November 2014 Article:
Results from the 2013 National
Survey on Drug Use and Health: Mental
Health Findings
Quote:
“In 2013, an estimated 43.8 million adults … in the United States had any
mental illness (AMI) … This represents
18.5 percent of all adults in this country.”
And
“10.0 million … had serious mental illness … in the past
year.”
CONCLUSION:
Mental illness numbers are rising, not falling.
(Personal footnote: See Pulitzer
nominated researcher Robert Whitaker’s book: ANATOMY OF AN EPIDEMIC)
*****************************************************************************
4. Closing of the Mental Asylums (min:
4:41)
In the 1960’s President Kennedy signed a bill to close
mental hospitals.
Cited: DAN RATHER PRESENTS (2014) AXS TV (video
clip)
Quoting President
John F. Kennedy audio recording:
“Under this legislation, custodial mental institutions, will be replaced by
therapeutic centers. It should be
possible within a decade or two, to reduce the number of patients in mental
institutions by fifty percent or more.”
And
Cited: AP: Mentally
ill pose threat to elderly in nursing homes.
(Chicago March, 23, 2009)
Quote:
“…nearly 125,000 young and middle-aged adults with serious
mental illness lived in US nursing homes last year.”
And
Cited: DAN RATHER PRESENTS (2014) AXS TV (video
clip) (min 6:00)
Re: “Greyhound Therapy” – “a practice
critics call unthinkable. Discharging
seriously mentally ill patients too soon, then supplying them with a one-way
ticket out of town.”
*****(JEFF DECEMBER 2015 from GRIFFIN MEMORIAL, Norman OK)
CONCLUSION:
The community mental
health centers were never funded. And
“treatment” with drugs as outpatient, can be so stressful on the seriously mentally
ill, when sometimes they cannot manage their own lives, and need basics: stable, healthy
nutrition, counseling/therapies, and overall care. #NeedNewKindOfHospitalsAgain
****************************************************************************
5. The Mentally Ill in JAIL (min: 6:45)
Cited: National Alliance on Mental Illness,
Treatment Advocacy Center
(video clip)
Quote:
“Two million people with mental illness go to state and
local jails every year. That’s meant,
there’s now ten times more people behind bars than in state funded psychiatric
treatment.”
And
Cited: Treatment
Advocacy Center (min: 7:40)
September 2013 Article:
Justifiable Homicides by Law Enforcement
Officers: What is the Role of Mental
Illness?
Quote:
“…at least half of the people shot and killed by police each year in this
country have mental health problems.”
And
Cited: ABC News
abcnews.com NIGHTLINE (video clip)
Quote:
“These officers are experts in what’s called Crisis Intervention Training
(CIT). … It’s all part of a pioneering program where the mentally ill
are diverted out of jails and into treatment.”
And
Cited: NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness)
April 29, 2014 Article: NAMI
Calls on Congress to Promote Nationwide Expansion of Police Crisis Intervention
Teams (min: 8:45)
Quote:
“… 15 percent of law enforcement jurisdictions have adopted
the program.”
Quote:
(re CIT in police) “ … taking that training is usually
voluntary. How can something so
essential to your job, be voluntary?”
CONCLUSIONS:
1. Using the criminal
justice system to treat the mentally ill isn’t just ineffective; it’s expensive
and dangerous. The police are not
trained, nor equipped in de-escalation techniques and this many times leads to
the mentally ill being killed by police.
2. CIT with police
departments should’ve been implemented long ago and needs to be mandated and
expanded.
2. The definition of
“treatment” in this country falls short in the overall care and recovery of the
mentally ill. The forced drugging needs
to be reexamined and pre-testing for medical efficacy, drug tolerance per
individual, and a first psychotic break medical workup must happen to avoid
misdiagnosing a medical illness that mimics as psychosis, and which a
neuroleptic RX would be contra-indicated and could cause brain damage and
create the very psychotic behavior trying to be quelled.
*****************************************************************
6. The whole system needs a massive overhaul (min 9:10)
Cited: Medicaid.gov
Quote:
“… wont’ be easy. The public safety net
for the mentally ill spans Medicaid, which is different across the country,
eight federal agencies, who administer 112 different programs that in some way
touch on mental health, AND the social service agencies in each of the fifty
states.”
Quote:
“ Assertive Community Treatment, is designed to let those with serious mental
illnesses by providing regular in-home visits and help coordinating assistance
with things like housing and employment. “
Quote: Barbara Julius, ACSW (social worker), Director,
OUTREACH
(2005)(min 10:00):
“What makes mental health might not just be a visit to your psychiatrist, it
might mean having your entitlements in place, it might mean having your rent
paid on time. So instead of meeting with
the person and talking about how they’re doing, how they feel, once or twice a
month, what we do is EVERYTHING that it takes to keep people living in the
community living independently.”
Cited: Journal of
Psychiatry & Neuroscience
September 2005 Article:
Economic considerations associated with
assertive community treatment and supported employment for people with severe
mental illness
Quote:
“… [Assertive Community Treatment] services approximately pay for themselves.”
CONCLUSION:
That’s just one
example. There are many, disjointed
others. We, as a society have to figure
out how to fund them, or model other countries in a more progressive approach. It will take a major shift in current policy
of forced drugging (which has resulted in a rise in mental illness) and build a
new kind of hospital. No more nursing
homes with young mentally ill, no more homeless mentally ill, no more killing
of the mentally ill in crisis by the police, no more criminalization and
jail/prison of the mentally ill. A NEW HOLISTIC, LONG-TERM HOSPITAL IS THE ANSWER. It's humane, it's fiscally responsible, and it's TIME!!!!!
This isn’t going
away. It’s getting worse. We have to change the trajectory. It will make fiscal sense; it will save
LIVES, families, and is the only compassionate approach.
***************************************************************************
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