Showing posts with label Kendra's Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kendra's Law. Show all posts

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Libertarians should support involuntary commitment reform.

This is a digest of a more extensive version I wrote on civil commitment for Cato Institute, a libertarian think-tank. Rael Jean Isaac also wrote an excellent piece, Recycling Thomas Szasz for them that tackled Cato for ignoring science when developing policy.

A LIBERTARIAN’S PROPOSAL TO REFORM INVOLUNTARY COMMITMENT


Summary: Current civil commitment policies protect neither the liberty of persons with mental illness nor the liberty of the public. They have increased government intrusion, increased public costs, and are inhumane. Changing to scientifically based commitment procedures can increase the liberties of individuals with mental illness, increase the liberties of those without mental illness, and help downsize government. Therefore, improving civil commitment laws should be a goal of libertarians.

I have a relative with schizophrenia. Having said that, I agree with Herschel Hardin, a former leader of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Union, who has a son with schizophrenia, the diagnosis commonly found in people subject to civil commitment. He wrote:
The opposition to involuntary committal and treatment betrays a profound misunderstanding of the principle of civil liberties. Medication can free victims from their illness—free them from the Bastille of their psychoses—and restore their dignity, their free will and the meaningful exercise of their liberties.[1]
Because of the inadequacies of our current civil commitment practices, 5,000 individuals with mental illness commit suicide annually[2]. Another 200,000 are homeless.[3] Of course, those are not primary concerns to libertarians, most of whom believe that individuals have a right to kill themselves or live homeless.

Costs of the Status Quo
But as a result of our current restrictive commitment procedures, persons with mental illness kill 1,000 individuals annually, roughly 10% of all homicides.[4] The most likely victims are family members,[5] police, and sheriffs.[6] Take the parents of mentally ill Eric Bellucci in Staten Island. They were so fearful of their son, who had been hospitalized and involuntarily committed multiple times, that they locked him out of the house. So he camped in their yard. They begged to have him civilly committed, but the law required Eric to first become "dangerous." So he did. On October 13, 2010 he stabbed both his parents. They are dead and Eric will be permanently incarcerated. Hardly a victory for individual liberties.
Other individuals with untreated mental illness kill so many they become famous and earn sobriquets like “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski and “Fort Bragg Assassin” Aaron Bassler. Their families tried to get them treatment before they became killers. James Holmes, Seung-Hui Cho, and most recently Thomas Caffall each killed innocents and lost their own lives. But civil commitment laws don't help prevent dangerous behavior, they require it.
Because of restrictive civil commitment laws, individuals with serious mental illness are regularly shot by law enforcement who believe their erratic and irrational behavior is putting their own safety or that of the public in immediate danger.[7] People with severe mental illnesses are killed by police in justifiable homicides at a rate nearly four times greater than the general public.[8] The recently released videos of Kelly Thomas being beaten by police in Fullerton, California[9] and Michigan police shooting Milton Hall are the latest examples.[10]
Another concern of libertarians is that our current system is causing massive incarceration. As Amanda Pustilnik noted, 300,000 individuals with mental illness are now behind bars, due to the inadequacy of civil commitment laws. 15-25% of all prisoners have a mental illness.[11] With reformed civil commitment laws, many may have avoided incarceration. As a result of poor commitment laws, we now have a jail-based system for the most seriously ill. That creates a major drain on local law enforcement.[12] And it is expensive to the corrections system. The Department of Justice estimates that it costs $15 billion to incarcerate the 300,000 mentally ill.[13] That hardly counts as small government.
The lack of better civil commitment standards puts government itself at risk. President Ronald Reagan was shot by mentally ill John Hinckley. President James Garfield was killed by mentally ill Charles Guiteau. Presidents Andrew Jackson and Theodore Roosevelt were shot by persons with mental illness. Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords was shot by mentally ill Jared Loughner.
Clearly, the status quo is not serving the liberty needs of people with mental illness or the public safety needs of those without. It is also contributing to growth in government. Changes are needed that are grounded in science.

Knowledge about Schizophrenia Needed to Make Informed Changes
Untreated schizophrenia and untreated bipolar disorder are two of the disorders most likely to be represented among civilly committed populations. I’ll limit this discussion to schizophrenia.

Schizophrenia is a real disorder. There is not yet a chemical marker that can diagnose schizophrenia. But claiming that schizophrenia doesn’t exist because there is no test is like saying colon cancer didn’t exist before the invention of colonoscopy. Schizophrenia, like Parkinson’s, is diagnosed by analyzing the resultant behavior. For Parkinson’s, the behavior is arm movement. For schizophrenia it is delusional speech and psychotic behavior, among others.
Dr. E. Fuller Torrey collected research proving schizophrenia is a real disorder. Individuals with schizophrenia have enlarged ventricles,[14] a reduced volume of gray matter[15] more neurological abnormalities,[16] more neuropsychological abnormalities,[17] and decreased function of the prefrontal area[18] compared to controls.

Schizophrenia Causes Impaired Thinking
John Stuart Mill's introduction to On Liberty stated, “It is, perhaps, hardly necessary to say that this doctrine is meant to apply only to human beings in the “maturity of their faculties.” He was wrong. Some libertarians need reminding.
Science shows some individuals with schizophrenia are not in the “maturity of their faculties.” Neurocognitive impairment is a core component of schizophrenia and is likely associated with the neurobiology.[19]

Schizophrenia also causes individuals to have delusions.[20] John Hinckley shot President Reagan when he was off treatment because he “knew” it was the best way to get a date with Jodi Foster. Russell Eugene Weston Jr. shot two guards at the U.S. Capitol when he was off treatment so that he could find the “Great Safe of the U.S. Senate" where the "ruby satellite control" time reversal system could "sweep him away" to a time when he would not be deceased. When asked if he has a mental illness, he denies it.[21] Rather than being in control of his brain, his brain was in control of him.

Schizophrenia causes some individuals to hallucinate and hear voices. Walk down the street of any major city and you will see psychotic individuals screaming at voices only they can hear. Sometimes these voices command them to do things. Bad things. Being schizophrenic is not an exercise of free will that should be protected. It is a barrier to exercising free will that should be removed.

Individuals with schizophrenia think differently when treated than untreated.[22] Nowhere is this more apparent than in their attitudes towards civil commitment. While, by definition, 100% of individuals who are civilly committed were opposed to it at the time of commitment, multiple studies show around 80% retrospectively express gratitude.[23]

The proper goal of libertarians should not be to ensure individuals who “lack maturity of their faculties” remain locked in “the Bastille of their psychosis.” Libertarians should work to restore free will and liberties.

Untreated Schizophrenia Is Associated with Higher Incidence of Violence
Nowhere is the debate over civil commitment less informed than when it comes to answering the question “Are people with mental illness more violent than others?”[24] It is largely irrelevant, because civil commitment is not aimed at the 25-40% of Americans some claim have a "diagnosable mental disorder"—your friends on Prozac.
But there is a subset of about 5% who have a very serious and persistent mental illness like schizophrenia.[25] The subset of the 5% group who go off treatment are more likely to become violent than others.[26] This is particularly true when medications that have previously prevented them from becoming psychotic, hospitalized, or violent are stopped. This is the tiny group civil commitment should be designed to help.
We now know that past violence is a good predictor of future violence in individuals with serious mental illness. So is abusing substances. Commitment for seriously mentally ill individuals who have a history of violence or substance abuse should not be as burdensome as commitment for those who don’t.

Medications Reduce Violence in People with Schizophrenia
By reducing hallucinations and delusions, and by restoring “maturity of faculties,” medication reduces violence. This should be readily apparent because almost everyone civilly committed because they were dangerous is eventually released—because they are no longer dangerous. The difference between their pre-commitment state and post-commitment state was the administration of medicines. 

From a libertarian perspective, it doesn’t make sense to allow someone who is known to need medicines to stay nonviolent to go off medications and become violent. Going off treatment imposes an obligation on the citizenry to pay taxes and expand government so they can be incarcerated. Incidents of violence in someone who has mental illness and at the time was compliant with treatment are almost unheard of.

What is the current commitment law and how does it work in practice? 
Individuals with mental illness are allowed to refuse treatment and cannot be treated in the community system unless they volunteer. For the most seriously ill, this is often an insurmountable hurdle because of their anosognosia, neurocognitive dysfunction, hallucinations, and delusions. Individuals who need the community mental health system the most cannot get in.[27] They are allowed to deteriorate to dangerousness and then become subject to the involuntary commitment system.

But getting into the involuntary system is harder than getting into the voluntary system. In general, many states require individuals to be imminently provably dangerous to self or others.[28] Other standards exist, but they are rarely used and often so narrowly interpreted as to be similar to the "dangerousness" standard. If committed, the individual is confined to a locked ward, which is the most restrictive setting short of incarceration.

Because the voluntary and involuntary systems are so hard to access, most of the seriously mentally ill who refuse treatment wind up in the criminal justice system with all rights removed. 300,000 are incarcerated, five times as many as are hospitalized. And those incarcerations were likely the result of infringing on someone else’s rights by committing a crime.[29]

Surely there is a better way. Surely this is not what libertarians want to defend.

What Should Be Done?
From a libertarian’s perspective, successful civil commitment reform would use commitment less, use it only when needed, steer individuals away from the most restrictive forms of commitment to less restrictive forms, and place greater reliance on the systems that require the least amount of government. We know how to do that.

The “danger to self” or "parens patraie" commitment standard is the one most likely to be considered problematic by libertarians. But they are presupposing the individual has the cognitive ability to avoid danger to self if he or she wanted. As the previously cited research shows individuals with schizophrenia become a "danger to self" because they develop delusions and hallucinations combined with anosognosia and neurocognitive impairments that prevent them from accessing treatment.

The "danger to others" or "police powers" commitment standard is accepted by almost all, including libertarians. Quoting John Stuart Mill, "[T]he only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others."[30] But Mill doesn’t tell us when to intervene. Should we intervene to prevent harm to others when the hallucinations start, when the person goes off medicines, when the person becomes psychotic again, when the gun is purchased, when the bullet loaded, when the gun is fired, or when the bullet hits its target?

The standard is now interpreted so narrowly that it does not apply until after the bullet is fired. As such it ignores the fact that individuals with serious mental illness may become predictably dangerous long before they become imminently dangerous. Because we prevent intervention until after dangerousness, we have to rely on the most restrictive form of commitment: inpatient commitment.

The Advantages of Adding Other Standards for Commitment
Preventing the mass civil commitment and incarceration of people with mental illness requires lowering the commitment hurdle to something below imminently, provably dangerous. 

Lowering the hurdle would shorten commitments because the longer that treatment is delayed, the longer it takes to stabilize and restore the "maturity of their faculties."[32] Lowering the commitment standard would also allow use of less onerous forms of commitment like outpatient treatment.

Libertarians may object, fearing that more people will have their rights removed. That is not true. The failure to use a lower standard results in 300,000 people having all their rights removed via incarceration and almost everyone who is committed, being committed to a locked ward.

Libertarians may point to abuse of civil commitment in Stalinist Russia or the United States. Those were due to the inefficacy of treatments and the lack of due process. Treatments are better now[33] and obviously all civil commitment systems need to include vigorous due process protections including independent administrative or judicial review; access to representation; and the ability to submit evidence, question witnesses, appeal decisions, and filehabeas petitions. 

Maintaining strict due process does not increase the size of government. Commitment process uses fewer judicial and legal resources than incarceration. It’s not just a wash, it’s a net savings.[34]

Other Standards That Should Be Used
Once we understand that treatment can prevent violence in those prone to it and that the "choice" to go off medications is not being made of free will but because the brain is impaired, the libertarian objective should be to restore free will, not stand back so violence can occur.

Many standards accomplish that. A “grave disability” standard allows intervention when a seriously mentally ill person becomes “substantially unable, except for reasons of indigence, to provide for any of his or her basic needs, such as food, clothing, shelter, health or safety.” Few libertarians would let someone with Alzheimer’s or developmental disabilities go without treatment simply because they can’t fend for themselves.

The “capacity standard” allows intervention when someone as a result of their “serious mental illness is unable to fully understand or lacks judgment to make an informed decision regarding his or her need for treatment, care or supervision.” This is the "lacks maturity of faculties" standard. If someone "due to mental illness, is unable to understand the advantages, disadvantages, or alternatives to a particular treatment, or is unable or unwilling to apply them to his or her situation and requires such treatment to prevent severe mental, emotional, or physical harm"[35] they too "lack the maturity of faculties" and libertarians should not object to their treatment.

By using these lower standards we can intercede with people who are likely to become violent, lose their own liberty, and infringe on the liberties of others or lose their own life due to their illness. By using civil commitment to restore free will, we can prevent massive incarceration of people with mental illness and the resulting bloating of government courts and corrections systems. We can send people to less restrictive forms of commitment, reduce the time in commitment and do a better job protecting the public. In other words, achieve libertarian objectives.

Use Less Restrictive Forms of Commitment
Some alternatives to inpatient commitment, in order from most restrictive to least restrictive, are guardianship, parole or conditional discharge from hospital after involuntary commitment, and Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT). 

Assisted Outpatient Treatment is the new kid on the block and the most important and useful. Forty-two states have Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT), but no state uses it sufficiently. AOT is a court order to stay in treatment as a condition for living in the community. It is usually limited to those who have a past history of at least two incarcerations, involuntary commitments, or needless hospitalizations.[36] It is palatable to libertarians because it is only used after unfettered liberty has proven unsuccessful. The patient is monitored in the community and can be put in an inpatient setting if they fail in the outpatient setting.[37]

AOT furthers the libertarian goal of preventing people from being sent to more restrictive environments. Research on individuals treated under New York State’s AOT law, called "Kendra’s Law" found 83% fewer were arrested, 87% fewer were incarcerated, 77% fewer experienced psychiatric hospitalization, and length of hospitalization was reduced 56%.[38] In California, where AOT is called "Laura’s Law," it cut incarceration 67% in one county and 78% in another. AOT cut hospitalization 46% and 86% in the same counties.[39]

AOT helps further the libertarian goal of preventing persons with mental illness from infringing on the liberties of others. In New York, after enrollment in Kendra’s Law, 46% fewer damaged or destroyed property and 43% fewer threatened physical harm to others. Patients who were more violent to begin with were nevertheless four times less likely to perpetrate serious violence after undergoing treatment.[40] The odds of arrest for a violent offense were 8.61 times greater before AOT than they were in the period during and shortly after AOT.[41]

AOT furthers the libertarian goal of keeping government small. In California, it saved $1.81 for every dollar spent. In New York, where approximately 1,800 individuals are under AOT it has been estimated to save $73,800,000 in incarceration costs and $36,000,000 in hospitalization costs for a total of $109,800,000.[42] Libertarians should support use of these less restrictive commitment venues.
Conclusion

Current civil commitment practices fail to result in the libertarian objective of having fewer individuals incarcerated, public safety protected, and government growth restrained. Using lower commitment standards combined with less restrictive treatment venues can reduce the number incarcerated, shorten length of commitments, improve safety of the citizenry, and reduce the size of government. Reforming civil commitment practices can free people with serious mental illness "from the Bastille of their psychoses—and restore their dignity, their free will and the meaningful exercise of their liberties." 

There is a strong libertarian rationale for reforming civil commitment laws.
DJ Jaffe
Executive Director
Mental Illness Policy Org
http://mentalillnesspolicy.org
Notes
[1] Hardin, Herschel. “Uncivil Liberties” Vancouver Sun. July 22, 1993.
[2] http://mentalillnesspolicy.org/consequences/suicide.html
[3] http://mentalillnesspolicy.org/consequences/homeless-mentally-ill.html
[4] http://mentalillnesspolicy.org/consequences/1000-homicides.html
[5] Of spouses killed by a spouse, 12.3 percent of defendants had a history of untreated mental illness; of children killed by a parent, 15.8 percent of defendants had a history of untreated mental illness; of parents killed by children, 25.1 percent of defendants had a history of untreated mental illness; and of siblings killed by sibling, 17.3 percent of defendants had a history of untreated mental illness. 1994 Department of Justice Statistics Special Report, "Murder in Families.”
[6]http://mentalillnesspolicy.org/crimjust/120LEOSkilledbyMentallyIll.htm
[7] The Treatment Advocacy Center runs a fascinating online database called “Preventable Tragedies” that documents mentally ill who have been shot by police or become violent to others.
[8] See this research on officers shooting persons with mental illness.
[9] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ku42PPzYEqs
[10] http://www.cnn.com/2012/08/16/us/michigan-police-shooting/index.html
[11] Here is a summary of studies of incarcerated mentally ill.
[12] Michael C. Biasotti, VP, New York State Chiefs of Police “Management of the Severely Mentally Ill and its Effects on Homeland Security” Naval Postgraduate School. 2011.
[13] Department of Justice Source Book on Criminal Justice Statistics (1996). $15 billion is based on an estimated cost of $50,000 per ill inmate per year, and 300,000 individuals with serious mental illness incarcerated.
[14] Van Horn, J.D., and McManus, I.C. (1992). "Ventricular Enlargement in Schizophrenia. A Meta-Analysis of Studies of the Ventricle:Brain Ratio (VBR)." British Journal of Psychiatry160, 687–97; Soares, J.C., and Mann, J.J. (1997). "The Anatomy of Mood Disorders: Review of Structural Neuroimaging Studies." Biological Psychiatry 41, 86–106; 
Elkis, H., Friedman, L., Wise, A. et. al. (1995) "Meta-Analyses of Studies of Ventricular Enlargement and Cortical Sulcal Prominence in Mood Disorders. Comparisons with Controls or Patients with Schizophrenia." Archives of General Psychiatry52, 735–46.

[15] Lawrie, S.M, and Abukmeil, S.S. (1998) "Brain Abnormality in Schizophrenia: A Systematic and Quantitative Review of Volumetric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Studies."British Journal of Psychiatry 172, 110–20.

[16] Schroder, J. et. al. (1992). "Neurological Soft Signs in Schizophrenia." Schizophrenia Research 6, 25–30.
[17] Torrey, E.F. et. al. (1994). Schizophrenia and Manic-Depressive Disorder. New York: Basic Books: 127, 176-7 (1994); Goldberg, T.E., and Gold, J.M. (1995) "Neurocognitive Functioning in Patients with Schizophrenia: an Overview." In: Bloom, F.E. and Kupfer, D.J. (eds). Psychopharmacology: The Fourth Generation of Progress. New York: Raven Press; Hoff, A.L., Shukla, S., Aronson, T. et. al. (1990). "Failure to Differentiate Bipolar Disorder from Schizophrenia on Measures of Neuropsychological Function." Schizophrenia Research 3, 253–60; Morice, R. (1990). "Cognitive Inflexibility and Pre-Frontal Dysfunction in Schizophrenia and Mania." British Journal of Psychiatry 157, 50–4; Berman, K.F., and Weinberger, D.F. (1991). "Functional Localization in the Brain in Schizophrenia." In: Tasman, A. and Goldfinger, S. (eds.).Review of Psychiatry vol. 10. Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Press, 24–59.

[18] Andreasen, N.C., et. al. (1992). "Hypofrontality in Neuroleptic-Naive Patients and in Patients with Chronic Schizophrenia." Archives of General Psychiatry 49, 943–58.
[19] Goldberg TE, Ragland JD, Torrey EF et al. "Neuropsychological Assessment of Monozygotic Twins Discordant for Schizophrenia." Archives of General Psychiatry47 (1990): 1066-1072; Goldberg TE, Gold JM. "Neurocognitive Functioning in Patients with Schizophrenia: an Overview." In FE Bloom and DJ Kupfer (eds.), Psychopharmacology: The Fourth Generation of Progress, New York: Raven Press, 1995, pp. 1245-1257; Gourovitch M, Goldberg TE. "Cognitive Deficits in Schizophrenia: Attention, Executive Function, Memory and Language Processing." In C. Pantelis, H. E. Nelson, and T. R. E. Barnes (eds.), Schizophrenia: A Neuropsychological Perspective, New York: John Wiley, 1996;
[20] “What are the symptoms of Schizophrenia,” National Institute of Mental Health.
[21] Torrey, Fuller, MD. “Bazelon Center is Wrong – Weston and Goldstein Refused Treatment and Services.”
[22] A collection of anosognosia research at MentalIllnessPolicy.org.
[23] A summary of some of the research on involuntary medication and Assisted Outpatient Treatment at MentalIllnessPolicy.org.
[24] Satel, S. and Jaffe, DJ, “Violent Fantasies” National Review July 20, 1998, pp. 36-37.
[25] National Institute of Mental Health.
[26] A two summaries of the research can be found at MentalIllnessPolicy.org.
[27] Interestingly, from a libertarian perspective, this means the mental health system is treating all others. It prioritizes the least ill and sends the most seriously ill to jails, prisons, shelters, and morgues. This has caused a giant and wasteful mental health industry that rather than serving a core state function of helping those who can’t help themselves, is instead, helping all others. See DJ Jaffe, “Mental Health Kills Mentally Ill,” Huffington Post, January 10, 2010.
[28] O’Connor v. Donaldson, 422 U.S. 563 (1975) and others.
[29] Admittedly, some may be what libertarians call ‘victimless’ crimes like possession of narcotics, prohibited pornography, soliciting a prostitute and others.
[30] John Stuart Mill. On Liberty, 1859.
[31] Testimony given at meeting of West Virginia Subcommittee C of the Joint Judiciary Committee August 13, 2012.
[32] There have been at least ten studies on delayed treatment leading to poorer prognosis.
[33] All treatments have side effects. All decisions involving treatment, voluntary or not, should balance these side-effects against the efficacy of the treatment.
[34] When Nevada County, CA recently introduced Assisted Outpatient Treatment, they found “County counsel cost is minimal…. Public Defender cost varies, but there would likely be few new or additional costs, because these same individuals would need representation in Criminal Court, Mental Health Court, or Adult Drug Court, if not being dealt with in (outpatient commitment) Court. (Michael Heggarty, Nevada County Behavioral Health, Carol Stanchfield, Turning Point Providence Center, Honorable Judge Thomas Anderson, Nevada County Superior Court. “Assisted Outpatient Treatment in California: Funding Strategies” February 7, 2012.
[35] 1995 Wisconsin Act 292 51.15 (1) (a) (5).
[36] See NYS Mental Hygiene Law § 9.60 (c); CA WIC, Article 9 5346(a) or Treatment Advocacy Center model law.
[37] Many people have questions about how monitoring is accomplished. We already monitor those in the parole system and those with TB living in the community. Likewise we have teams of social workers who monitor the non dangerous mentally ill. There are many feasible existing ways to accomplish monitoring. At minimum, a family member or significant other, or community member could report the reemergence of symptoms to a doctor, social worker, psychiatric nurse, law enforcement officer or other person who could determine if the person needs to be brought to a hospital for evaluation. Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) teams can also be used.
[38] A summary of studies on Kendra’s Law.
[39] Michael Heggarty, Behavioral Health Director, Nevada County. “The Nevada County Experience,” Nov. 15, 2011; County of Los Angeles. “Outpatient Treatment Program Outcomes Report" April 1, 2010 – December 31, 2010.
[40] Phelan JC, Sinkewicz M, Castille DM, Huz S, Muenzenmaier K, Link BG. "Effectiveness and Outcomes of Assisted Outpatient Treatment in New York State." Psychiatric Services 61. No 5 February 2010.
[41] Bruce G. Link, Ph.D., et. al. "Arrest Outcomes Associated With Outpatient Commitment in New York State." Psychiatric Services. May 2011.
[42] Savings calculation at KendrasLaw.org.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

How NYS Can Comply with Olmstead & Improve Mental Illness Care


NYS is currently holding hearings and accepting write in testimony on how to comply with the Supreme Court decision, Olmstead v. L.C. That decision held that Title II of the ADA requires services for persons with mental illness be provided in the “most integrated setting appropriate to the needs of the disabled, considering available resources". 

We believe that using Kendra's Law more can help accomplish that because it is proven to reduce the use of more restrictive settings like incarceration and inpatient commitment. Unfortunately, those who scheduled the hearings did not schedule any hearings in jails, prisons, or psychiatric hospitals, the three most restrictive settings. As a result, the testimony they are likely to hear will not reflect the thoughts of persons in the most restrictive settings, the professionals who provide care for them or their families.

You can send your own thoughts on how to serve people with mental illness in the least restrictive, most integrated settings to raymond.l.pierce@opwdd.ny.gov echoing the below to or fill out the form at http://www3.opwdd.ny.gov/wp/wp_catalogz2414.jsp . You can learn more about Kendra's Law at http://kendras-law.org

Testimony of DJ Jaffe

NYS Olmstead Implementation Plan Public Hearing
August 21, 2012

NYS is required to make greater use Kendra’s Law to ensure individuals with mental illness receive treatment in the most integrated setting as required by Olmstead v. LC

Failure to use Kendra’s Law could create liabilities for the state and localities.

 “It is a common phenomenon that a patient functions well with medication, yet, because of the mental illness itself, lacks the discipline or capacity to follow the regime the medication requires.” . (Olmstead V. L. C. (98-536) 527 U.S. 581 (1999))

It must be remembered, for the person with severe mental illness who has no treatment the most dreaded of confinements can be the imprisonment inflicted by his own mind, which shuts reality out and subjects him to the torment of voices and images beyond our own powers to describe.... (Olmstead V. L. C. (98-536) 527 U.S. 581 (1999))



1. New Yorkers with serious mental illness are not living in most integrated setting
    • 15,000 New Yorkers with mental illness  are living in jails and prisons
    • 4,000  New Yorkers with mental illness are living in state psychiatric hospitals
    • In NY you are more likely to be incarcerated for mental illness than hospitalized.

2. The problem is not lack of “available resources.” NY has “available resources”

            * NYS spends in excess of $3 billion on mental health
            * Individuals with serious mental illness are largely excluded from OMH programs especially if they lack the ability to volunteer. The seriously ill go to the end of the line while worried well go to front.
            * OMH has never improved services for the most seriously ill, absent a court order.
            * $665 million of OMH budget (1/3) wasted per Dr. Llloyd Sederer: “Thus, taken together, $665 of the $814 (more than 80 percent!) was spent, perhaps unnecessarily, on people with mental disorders, principally for the serious medical illnesses that they frequently suffer.”
             * OMH refuses to focus existing resources on the most seriously ill. OMH serves 650,000. Only 3,600 are seriously mentally ill individuals in state hospitals and 1,871 are in assisted outpatient treatment programs. Maybe 100K are in other programs that help seriously mentally ill. 

OMH policies transfer the seriously ill to shelters, prisons and jails in violation of Olmstead.

3. Kendra's Law research shows it can help people live in the least restrictive most integrated setting

Once enrolled in Kendra’s Law
·  77% fewer experienced psychiatric hospitalization
·  On average, AOT recipients' length of hospitalization was reduced 56% from pre-AOT levels.
·  83% fewer experienced arrest
·  87% fewer experienced incarceration.
March 2005 N.Y. State Office of Mental Health “Kendra’s Law: Final Report on the Status of Assisted Outpatient Treatment. “

·      Individuals who received court ordered treatment in addition to enhanced community services spent 57 percent less time in psychiatric hospitals than individuals who received only enhanced services.
·      Individuals who had both court ordered treatment and enhanced services spent only six weeks in the hospital, compared to 14 weeks for those who did not receive court orders.
1998 Policy Research Associates, Inc. Research study of the New York City involuntary outpatient commitment pilot program.

Patients given mandatory outpatient treatment - who were more violent to begin with - were nevertheless four times less likely than members of the control group to perpetrate serious violence after undergoing treatment.
February 2010 Columbia University. Phelan, Sinkewicz, Castille and Link. Effectiveness and Outcomes of Assisted Outpatient Treatment in New York State Psychiatric Services, Vol 61. No 2

For those who received AOT the odds of any arrest were 2.66 times greater and the odds of arrest for a violent offense 8.61 times greater before AOT than they were in the period during and shortly after AOT. The group never receiving AOT had nearly double the odds of arrest compared with the AOT group in the period during and shortly after assignment.
March 2005 N.Y. State Office of Mental Health “Kendra’s Law: Final Report on the Status of Assisted Outpatient Treatment. “

(AOT) improves likelihood that providers will serve seriously mentally ill: It is also important to recognize that the AOT order exerts a critical effect on service providers stimulating their efforts to prioritize care for AOT recipients.
June 2009 D Swartz, MS, Swanson, JW, Steadman, HJ, Robbins, PC and Monahan J. New York State Assisted Outpatient Treatment Program Evaluation. Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, June, 2009

Providers of both transitional and permanent housing generally report that outpatient commitment help clients abide by the rules of the residence. More importantly, they often indicate that the court order helps clients to take medication and accept psychiatric services.
1999 NYC Dept. of Mental Health, Mental Retardation and Alcoholism Services. H. Telson, R. Glickstein, M. Trujillo, Report of the Bellevue Hospital Center Outpatient Commitment Pilot


Research in numerous other states support the proposition that AOT enables individuals with serious mental illness to live in the least restrictive most integrated setting.

To be compliant with Olmstead, NY must make greater use of Kendra’s Law. To offer humane care for the most seriously ill NY should make use of Kendra’s Law.

 To learn more, visit http://kendras-law.org




[i] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lloyd-i-sederer-md/patient-care-managing-high-need_b_8134

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

June Update: Mental Illness Around the Country

1. Make Greater Use of Assisted Outpatient Treatment

2. Focus more resources on serious mental “illness” rather than mental “health”

  • National:  Articles by Marvin Ross in Canada, Dr. E. Fuller Torrey in Washington, Carlat Psychiatry Blog, and MIPO, all criticized Robert Whitaker’s, Anatomy of an Epidemic for using pseudo science to make the case that medicines don’t help people with mental illness. Natasha Tracy wrote “Why it’s ignorant to write off psychiatry” And the Lancet published a meta analysis that shows Whitaker is wrong. Meds do work
  • Are we arbitrarily diagnosing people with mental health problems? Asks Pete Earley.
  • AZ may see more mental health resources invested in the community as a result of a recent lawsuit settlement
  • NH: We criticized New Hampshire officials for patting themselves on the back when there are more mentally ill incarcerated than hospitalized in that state.
  • NY As incredible as it sounds, NYAPRS, a trade association of mental health providers in NYS actually started lobbying for less medical treatment for people with serious mental illness.
  • WA: A seriously mentally ill man who was without treatment shot 5 in Seattle and then himself.
  • California is unique in that it has plenty of money as a result of Proposition 63 which funded the mental health services act which is supposed to help people with serious mental illness. Unfortunately county and state officials continue to squander the money.
3. Preserve enough hospital beds so seriously ill can get access

 

4. Change Not Guilty By Reason Of Insanity So it Helps People

5. Reform Involuntary Treatment Laws so they prevent violence, rather than require it In Brief

 

Thursday, June 7, 2012

NYAPRS proposes reducing funding for medical treatment of mentally ill

Medicaid realignment in New York is expected to generate $10 billion in savings over five years and the plan is to spend much of it on medical care for people with serious mental illness. That's good news to everyone except the NYS Assoc. of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services--the trade association for providers of non-medical services to voluntary mental health patients. In a blog, NYAPRS wrote
(C)oncerns have been raised (about) a general emphasis on medical approaches that provide insufficient attention to expanding rehabilitation, peer support and culturally competent ones.
As if giving medical care to someone is the opposite of cultural competence.

As a result of the lack of medical care more people of color are incarcerated for mental illness than hospitalized. And disproportionately so. That is one reason why Kendra's Law is supported by groups made up almost entirely of people of color, like the local Harlem Alliance on Mental Illness. (Consumers too). Extensive Kendra's Law research shows it helps those enrolled, get well and stay well. Yet the trade association is trying to preserve cracks in Kendra's Law that allow their members to avoid treating people with serious mental illness.

I recognize that the trade-association only provides non-medical rehabilitation services and focuses on mental health not mental illness. And I understand that when you see a bucket of money, you want to divert it to your own members. But many people with schizophrenia need, gulp, medical services. Specifically, symptom amelioration. That is what enables them to reach the point where they can benefit from rehab services. NYAPRS wants to take those medical services away, so the funds can go to their association members. The employees of association members are then urged to also lobby for more money for their members.

What is especially disingenuous is that in an op-ed the trade association, as part of their continuing battle against Kendra's Law (a less restrictive, more humane alternative to incarceration or commitment) recently wrote that instead of Kendra's Law
A better approach is to back new programs designed by the governor’s Medicaid Redesign Team to make our mental-health services more effective.
On the one hand they argue that Medicaid Redesign is going to help the most seriously ill and on the other write they don't want the Medicaid used for medical care.

You can't have it both ways. But that's unlikely to stop them from trying.

Monday, June 4, 2012

New York Needs Kendra's Law: You can help

(May 2012, New York) Kendra's Law allows courts to order a small subset of people with serious mental illness who have a past history of violence to accept treatment as a condition for staying in the community. Kendra's Law has been very successful at keeping patients healthier and preventing needless deterioration to violence. See Kendra's Law op-ed in Albany Times Union.

But Kendra's Law has giant cracks in it that send the most seriously ill to jails, prisons, shelters and morgues. A bipartisan Kendra's Law Improvement Act has been proposed to close the cracks that has wide-ranging support including by NAMI/NYS, NYS Chiefs of Police and many others who want better care for people with mental illness. But it is being vigorously opposed by OMH funded community mental health providers and county mental health directors who don't want to have to treat the most seriously ill. They prefer to cherry-pick the easiest to treat for admission to their programs and bury their head in the sand about the most seriously ill.

Please call Assembly speaker Sheldon Silver at 518-455-3791 and Governor Cuomo at: (518) 474-8390.
Urge them to Pass the Kendra's Law Improvement Act (A 6987) to Close the Cracks In Kendra's Law
We have generated media attention, but not enough calls
This is critical.


The legislative session is coming to an end and Cuomo, Silver and Skelos will be deciding whether or not to help people with mental illness by closing cracks. The NYS mental health industry is lobbying them heavily to preserve the cracks.

Thank you for all you do. Spread the word. Forward to friends.

The media is on our side, but we need more calls:

Op-ed in Today's Albany Times Union
Op-ed in Yesterday's Buffalo News
Editorial in NY Daily News
Op-ed in NY Post by Bill Sponsors
Op-ed in Ithaca Journal:
Letter in Schenectaday Gazette
Op-ed in NY Daily News
Editorial in Staten Island Advance

DJ Jaffe
Executive Director
Mental Illness Policy Org.
http://kendras-law.org

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Assemblyman Felix Ortiz puts police, public and mentally ill at risk

A version of this appeared in NY Daily News on April 18.

Yesterday, the mother of Terrence Hale called New York’s Finest about her mentally ill son who was off medicine and acting out. When Officer Eder Loor arrived to help, Mr. Hale stabbed him. Earlier this month, Easter Sunday, Benedy Abreu’s mother called police about her mentally ill son, who was also off medications and barricaded in the apartment. When officers William Fair and Phillip White of the 50th precinct knocked on the door, Mr. Abreu opened it and lunged at them with a knife stabbing both.

Why are so many people with serious mental illness being allowed to deteriorate and become violent, putting themselves and public at risk? Why has the mental health system turned over care of the mentally ill to the police making their already dangerous job, even more dangerous?

Who’s to blame? I nominate Felix Ortiz, Chairman of the New York State Assembly Mental Health Committee. Back in 1999, at the request of families of people with serious mental illness, New York State politicians came together and passed Kendra’s Law, named after Kendra Webdale who was pushed to her death in front of a train by a young man with schizophrenia who the mental health system also allowed to go untreated.

Kendra’s Law allows courts to do two things. They can order very seriously mentally ill patients who have a history of violence or incarceration to accept violence preventing treatment as a condition of living in the community. This keeps them healthier and happier. Perhaps more importantly, courts can also involuntarily commit the recalcitrant mental health system to provide the treatment to these seriously mentally ill people, something they are notoriously reluctant to do.

It’s been a huge success. By requiring certain seriously mentally ill people to stay in treatment—with full due process protections, Kendra’s Law reduced arrest, dangerous behavior, violence, incarceration, homelessness and suicide. It saved money and improved the quality of life for those living with serious mental illness. It keeps the public and the police safer.

So what’s the problem? Kendra’s Law is rarely used. Less than 2,000 seriously mentally ill people are in Kendra’s Law because the mental health system refuses to ask courts to use it. Terrence Hale was never on it and Benedy Abreu was on it, but allowed to go off. As a result, neither was on the medicines that could have prevented the horrors experienced by the officers, and preserved their own ability to live unincarcerated.

To fix this problem, two years ago Assembly member Ailleen Gunther and Senator Catherine Young introduced a bill (A6987/S4881) that would require officials to investigate claims of family members, like the parents of Mr. Abreu and Mr. Hill instead of sending them to the police. It would require jails to notify mental health officials when releasing a prisoner who was on psychiatric medications while incarcerated so the officials can determine if they should be in Kendra’s Law. That might have helped prevent Mr. Hale from stabbing Officer Loor yesterday as Mr. Hale had a rap sheet. Another provision requires hospitals to notify mental health officials when someone who was involuntarily committed-- already been determined to be 'danger to self or others-- is being released. Again: that allows mental health officials to see if they need mandatory treatment in community. The bill would also require that mental health officials to review expiring court orders to see if they should be renewed. That might have kept Benedy Abreu in treatment and prevented Officers White and Fair from being stabbed.

Makes sense? Of course it does. That’s why it’s endorsed by the Alliance on Mental Illness of New York State, made up of parents of people with mental illness who want better treatment for their loved ones, and the New York State Association of Chiefs of Police, who want to keep the public and officers safer.

But Assemblyman Felix Ortiz Chair of the Mental Health Committee, for the second year in a row is refusing to bring the bill up, pass it, and refer it to the legislature so it can become law. He can be reached at 718-492-6334 or 518-455-3821.