Call 202 224 3121 or go here and urge your U.S.
Representative to co-sponsor HR 3717, the Helping Families in Mental Health
Crisis Act.
NAMI State and local chapters do brilliant work trying to improve care for people with the most serious mental illnesses and provide comfort to them and their families. NAMI/National is ignoring the most seriously ill in order to be politically correct.
NAMI State and local chapters do brilliant work trying to improve care for people with the most serious mental illnesses and provide comfort to them and their families. NAMI/National is ignoring the most seriously ill in order to be politically correct.
Representative Tim
Murphy (R. PA) has proposed HR3717 the “Helping Families in
Mental Health Crisis” that does much of what NAMI local and state members have
been begging for.
- It slightly frees families from HIPAA Handcuffs so they can get certain medical info about mentally ill loved ones
- Forces SAMHSA and other agencies to use their funds to treat people with serious mental illness as opposed to improving the mental health of all others.
- Increases NIMH funding.Requires government to invest in evidence-based programs rather than just politically correct ones.
- Takes steps to see that some hospital beds are preserved for those who need them.
- Stops federally funded lawyers from working to close hospitals and free people with serious mental illness from treatment (Something that led to the death of Joe Bruce’s wife at the hands of his son, Willie).
- Provides funding for Assisted Outpatient Treatment. AOT (Kendra’s Law in NY, Laura’s Law in CA) is only for a small subset of the most seriously ill that has already accumulated multiple hospitalizations, arrests, incarcerations, and episodes of homelessness caused by going off treatment that was available to them. AOT allows courts to provide those individuals a case management team and require them to stay in six months of monitored treatment in the community (with all sorts of due process protections). It also allows courts to order mental health programs to admit the most seriously ill, rather than cherry pick the easiest to treat. This combination has been proven to reduce incarceration, hospitalization, arrest, homelessness, and other negative outcomes of untreated serious mental illness by about 70% each wherever it has been used. By reducing the use of expensive and inhumane hospitals, jails and prisons, it cuts the cost of care in half, which can be reinvested to help even more people.
- Gives states an incentive to implement “need for treatment” civil commitment standards. Current law in many states prevents treatment of someone who is psychotic, hallucinating, or delusional until after they become danger to self or others. That’s ludicrous. Laws should prevent violence, not require it.
You can see a comparison of HR3717 to
another bill here that NAMI has not shared with members. Because of these provisions, most individual
NAMI members, many NAMI local affiliates, and NAMI State Chapters have been vigorous supporters
of The Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act. But NAMI/National refuses to lead the fight.
In a recent blog, NAMI/National Executive
Director Mary Giliberti, formerly of the Bazelon Center explained NAMI’s
failure to rally support because the bill is not supported by everyone in the
mental health industry and she fears 'the harm caused by
infighting." NAM/National should not be ceding control of its policy to
those who might disagree with it. NAMI/National, like state and local
chapters, should stand up for those with serious mental illness, not side with
the mental health industry. She also refuses to rally support for the bill
because it has AOT provisions in it, and allows access to treatment before
someone becomes dangerous. But those specific provisions are part of NAMI’s own policy!
History is repeating itself. Circa 1988 some NAMI/National
Board members spent seven years trying to get the rest of the NAMI/National
board to develop a thoughtful policy on Involuntary and Court Ordered
Treatment. NAMI/National refused to adopt a policy or even a process to
consider a policy. After seven years, a provision in the NAMI/National bylaws
was used to work around the NAMI/National boards refusal to lead. A policy endorsing AOT
and other reforms was put to a direct vote of the entire NAMI
membership at the annual meeting in 1995. It was overwhelmingly endorsed
by them. It wasn't even close. AFTER the NAMI grassroots acted, the
NAMI/National board adopted the policy as their own. And then they let it sit,
refusing to advocate for it.
Cut to today. A bill in Congress, The Helping
Families in Mental Health Crisis Act (HR3717) would provide federal funding for
the AOT pilot programs and civil commitment improvements that NAMI members
voted for. The NAMI policy says:
“Involuntary inpatient and outpatient commitment and court-ordered treatment should be used as a last resort and only when it is believed to be in the best interests of the individual in need”
Giliberti defends NAMI’s failure to rally
support for the bill by arguing that NAMI does not focus on treatments that are
used as a “last resort” for the seriously ill, and only work for “first resort”
treatments that help all others. This decision sentences many of the most
seriously ill to jails, shelters, prisons and morgues. It is cruel to those who
need NAMI’s help the most. Giliberti goes on to describe AOT as ‘controversial’
and a ‘third-rail’. But AOT is widely supported by police, the public, consumers who
have been in AOT and most importantly, NAMI’s own members who
voted on the issue. It is true that some in the mental health industry oppose
it because it somewhat eliminates their ability to cherry pick the easiest to
treat for admission to their programs. NAMI/National should be fighting against
that, not supporting it.
For some individuals with very serious mental
illness AOT is the last off ramp before incarceration. It is like placing a
fence by the edge of the cliff, rather than an ambulance at the bottom.
It's important. Politicians will make their compromises, our job is
to tell them what's right.
Please call 202 224 3121 or go to http://www.opencongress.org/people/zipcodelookup and
urge your Representative to “Cosponsor HR3717, the Helping Families in Mental
Health Crisis Act”. Even if NAMI/National won’t stand up for the most seriously
ill, local and state members still can. Bless you.
Video of Dr. Murphy
discussing schizophrenia and the Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis on
floor of House of Representatives several days ago.
Comparison of provisions related to
serious mental illness in adults
in the Helping Families in Mental Health
Crisis Act (HR 3717) and the
Strengthening Mental Illness in our
Communities Act (HR 4574)
CALL YOUR REPRESENTATIVE AT 202 224 3121. URGE SUPPORT OF HR3717
Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis
Act (HR-3717)
|
Strengthening Mental Health in Our
Communities (HR-4574)
|
|
Co-sponsors
|
62 Republican
34 Democrat
|
66 Democrat
0 Republican
|
Starts to address hospital
bed shortage that prevents seriously ill from getting care when needed
|
Yes
|
No
|
Provides funds for Assisted
Outpatient Treatment Pilot Programs (last off ramp before jail).
|
Yes
|
No
|
Gives states incentive to implement
need for treatment/grave disability standards so mentally ill loved ones can
be treated before becoming danger to self or others.
|
Yes
|
No
|
Writes exceptions into
HIPAA/FERPA so parents can get information about diagnosis, what
prescriptions need filling, and pending appointments of their loved ones to
help them
|
Yes
|
No
|
Funds NIMH research into
reducing violence by untreated seriously mentally ill
|
Yes
|
No
|
Requires government to
prioritize the most seriously ill rather than least ill
|
Yes
|
No
|
Inhibits SAMHSA from giving
grants to non-evidenced based programs and funding anti-treatment advocacy
(ex. eliminating hospitals, banning ECT, opposing AOT…)
|
Yes
|
No
|
Inhibits PAIMII from
overruling parents involved in care of loved ones
|
Yes
|
No
|
Focuses on medical model of
treatment
|
Yes
|
No
|
Gives law enforcement and
people with a medical background an important role on advisory boards
|
Yes
|
No
|
Cuts funding of programs
that are not working
|
Yes
|
No
|
Eliminate the 190 day
lifetime limit
On inpatient psychiatric
hospital care under Medicare
|
No
|
Yes
|
Reauthorizes Garrett Lee
Suicide Programs
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Support for Mental Health
Courts
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Train police to handle
mental illness calls better
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Protects Classes of
medicines
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Increases data collected by
DOJ on mental illness
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
ASK YOUR
REPRESENTATIVE TO COSPONSOR HR 3717:
THE HELPING
FAMILIES IN MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS ACT
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