Thursday, July 3, 2008
We're all responsible
I received a comment to my previous post yesterday which made me realize that there still continues to exist so much misunderstanding about assisted outpatient treatment laws.
The comment I received was: "Yay. More dead psych patients to come, thanks to you and yours http://youtube.com/watch?v=dx11j0kcLn4. Hard for anyone to remain in treatment when they're killing their patients left and right."
The video is certainly a very sad, tragic story of loss of life due to neglect of the hospital staff and they should be held responsible for not providing the help that woman obviously needed. However, assisted outpatient treatment laws, such as Senate Bill 226, means that a person is provided treatment in the community where they live and they are given supportive services by the mental health agency or provider who is required by the court order to ensure the timely, consistent treatment, including medications, is provided for an individual wherever they reside.
Hospital emergency rooms aren't the only places where people are ignored. I think it is also terrible that, as a society, we walk by homeless people with a mental illness every day and ignore them as they sleep on the streets. They are often victimized (robbed, molested, left out in the elements) and sometimes commit crimes that then put them in jail or prison. People with severe mental illnesses who lack insight to seek treatment are ignored by our mental health system all the time, unless they are engaged in a dangerous activity. Even families who try to help their loved ones who are exhibiting psychotic symptoms and who desperately need help have to wait until there is a "clear and present danger" to report in our state.
So, yes, that video was a stark example of the neglect of the hospital staff and they should lose their jobs. But what consequences should the mental health administrators and agencies face because, on a daily basis, large numbers of people with a mental illness are neglected, too. You don't see them on a video in a psychiatric hospital, but just wander through the streets, visit some jails, or maybe go to a NAMI support group and listen to the families who are unable to help their loved ones obtain consistent treatment because they haven't yet done something to fulfill the "danger to self or others" that is required by law. Or visit the Treatment Advocacy Center's "Preventable Tragedies" site to see how many people we turn our backs on day after day, year after year.
In the end, we're all responsible for this negligence. Requiring our state law to allow for timely, compassionate assisted outpatient treatment would show that we understand and want to help those who lack insight to seek and remain in treatment. Passing Senate Bill 226 would show that we care...it is the responsible thing to do.
The comment I received was: "Yay. More dead psych patients to come, thanks to you and yours http://youtube.com/watch?v=dx11j0kcLn4. Hard for anyone to remain in treatment when they're killing their patients left and right."
The video is certainly a very sad, tragic story of loss of life due to neglect of the hospital staff and they should be held responsible for not providing the help that woman obviously needed. However, assisted outpatient treatment laws, such as Senate Bill 226, means that a person is provided treatment in the community where they live and they are given supportive services by the mental health agency or provider who is required by the court order to ensure the timely, consistent treatment, including medications, is provided for an individual wherever they reside.
Hospital emergency rooms aren't the only places where people are ignored. I think it is also terrible that, as a society, we walk by homeless people with a mental illness every day and ignore them as they sleep on the streets. They are often victimized (robbed, molested, left out in the elements) and sometimes commit crimes that then put them in jail or prison. People with severe mental illnesses who lack insight to seek treatment are ignored by our mental health system all the time, unless they are engaged in a dangerous activity. Even families who try to help their loved ones who are exhibiting psychotic symptoms and who desperately need help have to wait until there is a "clear and present danger" to report in our state.
So, yes, that video was a stark example of the neglect of the hospital staff and they should lose their jobs. But what consequences should the mental health administrators and agencies face because, on a daily basis, large numbers of people with a mental illness are neglected, too. You don't see them on a video in a psychiatric hospital, but just wander through the streets, visit some jails, or maybe go to a NAMI support group and listen to the families who are unable to help their loved ones obtain consistent treatment because they haven't yet done something to fulfill the "danger to self or others" that is required by law. Or visit the Treatment Advocacy Center's "Preventable Tragedies" site to see how many people we turn our backs on day after day, year after year.
In the end, we're all responsible for this negligence. Requiring our state law to allow for timely, compassionate assisted outpatient treatment would show that we understand and want to help those who lack insight to seek and remain in treatment. Passing Senate Bill 226 would show that we care...it is the responsible thing to do.
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