Mark Sullivan
CARRBORO - Eight years into mental health reform, North Carolina has thus far dodged a bullet. Much of the postmortem on the origins and unfolding of the reform effort has been done. But how much worse can things get, and what will it take to bring about real and meaningful change? If recent developments do not mark a turning point in reform, the turning point will be marked by tragedy on a massive scale.
Consider that after all of this time, just three of 24 Local Management Entities (the organizations charged with ensuring needed services are available) in North Carolina are meeting minimum standards for routine care. Just 45 percent are meeting minimum standards for urgent care. How bad must things get before we are willing to rethink the fundamental assumptions that the new system was founded on?
North Carolina ranks near the bottom in the nation in per capita funding for mental health care at $16.80, compared with the national average of $91.12. Yet our problem is much bigger and more complex than underfunding.
After the first six months of the fiscal year, the Division of Mental Health, Substance Abuse and Developmental Disabilities reported that only 30 percent of mental health funds and 20 percent of substance abuse funds that had been budgeted had been expended.
On the surface it might look like the system is overfunded, but what these numbers signal is that needed services are not being provided because they are unavailable.
A core problem with the new system is that it was built upon a fundamentally flawed assumption; that the private sector will always outperform anything run publicly. It is a wildly popular notion, and a key reason why this particular plan was able to gain support in North Carolina.
The private sector is far superior in many arenas, but not necessarily when it comes to protecting the poorest and most vulnerable members of society. Private providers pick and choose which services they will provide, based on what will best meet the needs of the agency, as opposed to public entities whose first responsibility is to meet the needs of the citizenry. Departments of social service, child protective services and health departments are county run -- why not mental health?
In Orange, Person and Chatham counties, Caring Family Network, the agency designated as the Comprehensive Service Agency (CSA) in our area, has determined that it could not financially sustain service provisions and will cease offering services effective March 12. CSAs are designated to provide psychiatry, psychotherapy, crisis services, substance abuse counseling and community support. They are meant to replace our old public "safety net" clinics to ensure that a basic level of service is available to the community.
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THE NEW SAFETY NET IS THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM.
We know what happens when people who need psychiatric care do not receive it. Most suffer quietly, some lose their jobs, are engulfed by addiction, lose their housing, fill hospital emergency departments, crowd jails and prisons or take their own lives.
But Wendell Williamson, the UNC law student who opened fire on Franklin Street on Jan. 26, 1995 with a military rifle, killing two and injuring two, tells another story. Alvaro Castillo, who allegedly killed his father and fired eight shots at Orange High School in 2006, made a convincing argument for the importance of mental health treatment. Most recently, Steven P. Kazmierczak made his case at Northern Illinois University.
Calling up these names risks reinforcing some stigmatizing stereotypes about people with mental illnesses. When people hear of mental health disorders, they too frequently conjure up images of the most severe, least common cases. They do not think of someone like me, though I represent a more common picture of someone with a mental disorder.
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