Sunday, July 20, 2008

Another preventable death

If you take the time to read the "In The News" and "On TAC Blogs" sections on the Treatment Advocacy Center (TAC) home page, you will be familiar with the many stories of preventable tragedies due to untreated mental illnesses that occur all too frequently around the country.

We have been advocating to change our treatment laws in Pennsylvania so that individuals with a severe mental illness who also lack insight to seek and remain in treatment will be eligible for that help through the proposed assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) legislation, Senate Bill 226. A story that appeared on July 12, 2008 in The Daily Item by Damian Gessel, Life and death in a Snyder County ditch, is another example of a preventable tragedy, the death of a homeless man named James Farrell.

Both Kurt Entsminger, Executive Director of TAC and Estelle Richman, Pennsylvania Secretary of Public Welfare stated in this article that "Pennsylvania should adopt legislation similar to New York's Kendra's Law, which includes court-ordered mental health outpatient treatment provisions for patients who refuse help."

I couldn't agree more. SB 226, which is modeled after Kendra's Law, has already been proposed by State Senator Greenleaf and currently resides in the Pennsylvania Public Health and Welfare Committee that is chaired by State Senator Erickson. All we need now is to for Senator Erickson to bring this bill out of committee to vote, and then Pennsylvania will become a state like New York that will lower the statistics for homelessness, incarceration and victimization of those whose lives are often devastated by untreated mental illness.

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