|
We offer a monthly newsletter dealing with
the various issues surrounding infectious diseases. To
find out more click
HERE.
|
Mentally ill
people are sent to jail more often than hospital
http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2010-05-12-Jail12_ST_N.htm?csp=34&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:
UsatodaycomHealth-TopStories (News - Health - Top Stories)
By
Rita Rubin,
USA TODAY
On average, a
seriously mentally ill person in the USA is three times more
likely to be incarcerated than hospitalized, a report concludes
today.
In no state was a seriously mentally ill person someone with
schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, for example less likely to
be incarcerated than hospitalized, the report by the National
Sheriffs' Association and the Treatment Advocacy Center found.
But there were wide variations among states. In North Dakota, a
seriously mentally ill person was equally likely to be
hospitalized as incarcerated. But in Nevada and Arizona, such a
person was nearly 10 times more likely to be jailed than
hospitalized.
"We're not trying to say this is a criminal population," says
co-author James Pavle, executive director of the Treatment
Advocacy Center, a non-profit based in Arlington, Va. "All they
have to do is step over a line public urination, a
misdemeanor. Then they get in jail, and the whole thing can spin
out of control."
The report was based on previously unpublished 2004-2005 data
from the
Department
of Health and Human Services and the Bureau of
Justice.
"These people should be getting treatment, not jail time," Pavle
says.
As a result of the deinstitutionalization movement that began in
the 1960s, though, "it is now extremely difficult to find a bed
for a seriously mentally ill person who needs to be
hospitalized," Pavle and his co-authors write. In 1955, they
write, there was one psychiatric bed for every 300 Americans. In
2005, there was one for every 3,000 Americans. "There are forms
of treatment that don't necessitate hospitalization," Pavle
adds.
The Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal reported Friday
that Summit County Sheriff Drew Alexander had threatened to stop
accepting violent mentally ill people at the county jail. "We
don't want to be a dumping ground," Alexander told the paper.
"Everybody knows we need someplace other than a jail for these
people."
ANGER:
Classify it
as mental disorder, researcher says
SCHIZOPHRENIA:
Early signs
studied
Two forces, one from the right and one from the left, drove the
movement to release seriously mentally ill patients from
hospitals, says report co-author E. Fuller Torrey, a
psychiatrist who founded the Treatment Advocacy Center.
"Let's empty out the hospitals so we can save money" went one
line of thinking, says Torrey, executive director of the Stanley
Medical Research Institute, a non-profit based in Chevy Chase,
Md. The other: "If we're really humane, we'll release those
people, and they'll live happily ever after."
The first people to be released were the least sick, Torrey
says, "and many of them did very well." But then, he says, came
the sicker patients, who didn't understand the need to keep
taking their medications.
Torrey says the Akron sheriff is the first he has heard rebel,
"but I think it's a harbinger of what's coming."