A description of bill is here Some of the more interesting stuff starts on page 18 and 29
A copy of the bill is here
There is AOT funding and reform of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) in the bill. Here are the provisions we were most interested in having included. Some were, others were not.
Congressman Murphy has been the true hero of this process leaving his door open to, and never abandoning those of us who have seriously mentally ill relatives. He released the following statement:
“This is a landmark moment. The federal government’s course in addressing mental health and illness in America is being fundamentally changed. Congress has finally come together in a bipartisan effort to bring serious mental illness out of the shadows. Now federal agencies will be moving from feel-good programs for behavioral wellness to ones that emphasize evidence-based care for those at highest risk and those with symptoms of serious mental illness. We've achieved long-sought reforms by creating an Assistant Secretary for Mental Health and Substance Use to elevate, integrate and coordinate programs; investing in services for the most difficult to treat cases; expanding the mental health workforce, and so much more.“It couldn't be more fitting that we've reached this bipartisan agreement between the House and Senate at the close of Thanksgiving week. I am tremendously grateful for everyone who joined in the cause because we wouldn't be here if not for the unwavering efforts of the of the families, caregivers, providers and organizations that worked tirelessly to fix our broken mental health system. We won't solve it all in in one bill and we didn't get everything we needed, but we needed everything we got. It is my pledge to the patients and families in crisis that I will never stop fighting to deliver treatment before tragedy for those most in need.”
The Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act unanimously passed the House Energy and Commerce Committee, 53-0, in June and passed the U.S. House of Representatives, 422-2, in July More information on the bill can be found here.
Mental Illness Policy Org thanks the thousands of families of the seriously ill who joined with us to educate Congress that the needs of the seriously ill are different than those of the higher functioning, and that those needs have largely been ignored by government. By focusing SAMHSA on the seriously ill, funding Assisted Outpatient Treatment and looking for ways to free families of the seriously ill from HIPAA Handcuffs that prevent them from facilitating treatment, we believe the lives of all Americans--those with serious mental illness and those without--will be better served. - DJ Jaffe, Executive Director, Mental Illness Policy Org.
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