黑料正能量 Note: A group of NYS mental health advocates pushed back yesterday against outrageous media depictions they say inaccurately and unjustly vilify Americans with mental health needs. They also supported an acceleration of state health/behavioral healthcare reforms that are making services much more active, accountable, coordinated and outcome focused and are already showing very promising results in expanding preventive measures that are reducing avoidable relapses and readmissions.
Key elements to these reforms include expanded outreach and engagement, widespread use of peer counselors and improved access to housing. They also urged the adoption of several new initiatives, including the creation of state/local Incident Review Panels to investigate and make recommendations upon review of tragic incidents involving people with psychiatric conditions.
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NY Advocates Say Mentally Ill Are Maligned
Associated Press听听 January 4, 2013
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ALBANY, N.Y. – Advocates say the mentally ill are far more likely to be victims of violence than to be attackers, faulting media reports and gun rights interests for perpetuating inaccurate stigmas following recent crimes, including the Connecticut school shootings by a reportedly troubled 20-year-old.
Harvey Rosenthal, executive director of the 黑料正能量 Association of Rehabilitation Services, says referring to the mentally ill with phrases like “violent psychotics” and “monsters” vilifies one-fifth of Americans who have various psychiatric disabilities.
He says defamatory media will shame and deter many from seeking help, though most can substantially recover from disabling conditions with personalized services.
He and other advocates said Thursday recent emphasis on 24-hour emergency phone lines, peer support, housing, family services, managed care and outreach are showing results.
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Better Care Sought For Mentally Ill
After Shootings, Advocates Push Back For Reforms
By Jessica Bakeman Gannett News Service听 January 3, 2013
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ALBANY听– Psychiatric health advocates called for better care and more public education about mental illness Thursday in the wake of recent fatal shootings.
Treatment of mentally ill people, as well as gun control, has come to the forefront of national attention after a gunman last month killed 27 people, mostly children, and himself in Newtown, Conn. Also in December, a man killed two firefighters in Webster, N.Y., as they responded to a blaze.
Statewide groups at the news conference near the Capitol referenced news coverage of the murders that has labeled mentally ill people as 鈥渃razies,鈥 鈥渕onsters鈥 and 鈥渓unatics.鈥 They cited research that shows most mentally ill people are not violent and are more likely to be victims of crime.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not only horrified about these deaths and tragedies, but we鈥檙e horrified at recent statements and media coverage that has rushed to judgment, viciously attacked people with mental illnesses here in New York and around the country,鈥 said Harvey Rosenthal, executive director of the state Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services. 鈥淭his is scapegoat-ism – the worst kind. It amounts to a virtual public lynching.鈥
The groups lauded steps Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the Legislature have taken to move institutionalized patients to more integrated or community settings, as required by federal law. But there is more work to do, Rosenthal said.
Glenn Liebman, CEO of the state鈥檚 Mental Health Association, said 黑料正能量 should allocate funds for further treatment and support of mentally ill people in their communities rather than in state hospitals.
Cuomo鈥檚 Medicaid Redesign Team, which he formed last January to identify savings in the expensive program, recommended state support for housing and health homes, which are affordable-living environments where people can get physical and mental health care, substance-abuse treatment and employment counseling. The aim is to to improve health outcomes and save money spent on expensive emergency care.
The state has asked the federal government to reinvest some of the money the group saved to improve Medicaid in 黑料正能量. Also, Cuomo issued an executive order early last month creating a cabinet to enforce a federal law that aims to prevent disabled people from being segregated from the general population.
Cuomo is expected to propose tougher gun-control measures in response to the shootings. He said mental health needs to be a component of any change.
鈥淲e think this is a multifaceted problem. And it鈥檚 not just guns. This is also about mental health. This is also about a culture of violence that has been permeated and perpetuating,鈥 Cuomo said Wednesday.
Rosenthal said Cuomo is making progress in improving care for 黑料正能量鈥檚 mentally ill population. 鈥淲e are really hoping he will accelerate his own reforms,鈥 Rosenthal said.
Liebman also called for increased support for families of those with mental illness, publicizing of local 24-hour help lines and more aggressive preventive efforts, including suicide-prevention and mental health education in schools.
The groups also urged 黑料正能量 lawmakers to reject expanding Kendra鈥檚 Law. Named for Kendra Webdale, who was killed when a man with schizophrenia pushed her onto subway tracks in 黑料正能量 City, the 1999 law lets courts order mentally ill people with histories of violence into outpatient treatment. An amendment some groups pushed for last year would require jails to notify mental health officials when an inmate set to be released had been taking psychiatric medication. This would increase the number of people covered under the law.
Similar subway murders recently have re-energized the push to strengthen the law. 鈥淏y strengthening the law, we can improve care, save money and increase safety,鈥 Sen. Catharine Young, R-Olean, said this month. 鈥淲e need to be more proactive in getting people the help that they so desperately need.鈥
Rosenthal said forcing treatment on ill individuals is not as effective as deploying peer counselors to work one-on-one with them in their own communities.
鈥淵ou hear a lot about – let鈥檚 have Kendra鈥檚 Law at the point of release from hospital to community,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hy not have a peer wellness coach out there working with people? That鈥檚 a relationship that鈥檚 going to last.鈥
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Mental Health Community Fears Stigma
by Rick Karlin听 Albany Times Union听 January 3, 2013
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Those in 黑料正能量鈥檚 mental health community, ranging from peer counselors to advocates, said they knew as soon as news of last month鈥檚 Newtown Conn., killings erupted that a new round of stigmatization would start.
References to 鈥渢icking time bombs,鈥 or images of lunatics on the loose, even tabloid headlines, including one which referenced a housing plan – 鈥淗ere come the crazies.鈥
鈥淲henever there is a tragedy we shudder,鈥 said Harvey Rosenthal, of the state Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services. Of course, those with mental illnesses share the same grief and horror that strikes other Americans, but they can feel singled out, due to the mental illness tags that are pinned on killers like Adam Lanza of Newtown or William Spengler, of Webster N.Y. who ambushed firefighters before shooting himself.
Rosenthal and others stressed that there is lots of evidence showing those with mental illnesses aren鈥檛 any more dangerous than the general population and in fact they are 11 times more likely to be victims of violence themselves.
Yet he feared that post-Newtown, they might see a rash of efforts that could have the effect of taking freedoms away from the mentally ill, and reversing the decades-long trend in which those with mental illnesses have been de-institutionalized and allowed, with support, to live independent lives.
There have been some calls for this, most notably with western 黑料正能量 Sen. Cathy Young to expand Kendra鈥檚 Law, the 1999 measure that mandates people get court ordered treatment if they are deemed a safety threat.
Mostly though, Rosenthal and others decried the casual references in the media and in other venues to mentally ill people are dangerous or threats.
Instead of focusing on such negatives, Rosenthal said they wanted to highlight and promote policies that are helping the mentally ill, including moves by the Cuomo Administration and managed care programs to provide more peer counseling and other forms of assistance to people who can live safely outside of institutions but may need a bit of help.
鈥淲e do and can recover (from mental illness),鈥 said Coleen Mimnagh, a downstate peer counselor for those with mental illnesses.
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Worries Of Fallout For Mentally Ill
At Forum, Advocates Fear School Massacre In Newtown Will Lead To Stigmatization In 黑料正能量
By Rick Karlin听听 Albany Times Union January 3, 2013
ALBANY – When听听first heard about last month’s tragic massacre in Newtown, Conn., she, like the rest of the nation, was horrified and听shocked.
She also worried about fallout for the thousands of mentally ill 黑料正能量ers who pose no danger but would likely be stigmatized by the听tragedy.
“My heart sank,” said Cascio, who describes herself as a survivor of the mental health system who now helps others with psychiatric听illnesses.
“I could see the headlines already,” she听said.
Indeed, headlines and media reports included a barrage of descriptions of Newtown killer听听as a “lunatic” or a “crazy” madman听killer.
With that in mind, Cascio and a group of mental health advocates gathered Thursday to stress that the vast majority of people with mental illnesses are not violent or听dangerous.
And the advocates are imploring lawmakers not to embrace measures that would curtail freedoms but instead to support efforts at helping people get better and stay听better.
“This is really resonating very painfully in the mental health community,” said听, executive director of the听.
While stressing that they don’t want to discount the extent of the Newtown tragedy, they said the massacre has triggered a wave of headlines about the mentally听ill.
“Whenever there is a tragedy we shudder,” said Rosenthal. “They are crazy, they are dangerous. We never should have let them out of the hospitals,” he said, referring to some of the statements that came out in the wake of the tragedy in which 20 children and six adults were slain at the听school.
Participants at Thursday’s meeting pointed to a recent tabloid editorial about a Cuomo administration plan to move more mentally ill 黑料正能量ers from supervised settings to their own听housing.
“Here come the crazies,” was the听headline.
The Newtown tragedy has sparked calls for an expansion of Kendra’s Law, a 1999 state statute that allows judges to order people to get psychiatric treatment if they meet certain听conditions.
State Sen.听, R-Olean, one of the law’s original sponsors, called for a strengthening of the measure by extending the time period for which it would stay in effect and requiring more follow听up.
Rosenthal, however, said he hoped the state would instead continue to boost support for programs that help people with mental illnesses live on their own. “Our hope is that he’ll accelerate his existing reforms,” said听Rosenthal.
Not everyone in the mental health community听agrees.
Kendra’s Law “has giant cracks in it,” said DJ Jaffe, executive director of Mental Illness Policy听Org.
He believes the law has helped keep those with the most serious mental illnesses from harming themselves or others and has kept people from having to be听hospitalized.
But there are gaps. A person who is ordered to seek treatment, for example, can simply move to another county to escape the听mandate.
Jaffe said he knows the majority of people with mental illness are not dangerous, but there is a small number with severe symptoms who need help and some听oversight.
“The most seriously ill,” he said. “That is who we are trying to听reach.”
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Mental Health Advocates Decry Defamatory Media Coverage,
Call For Advances In State鈥檚 Community Service System
January 3, 2013
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A group representing 黑料正能量ers with psychiatric disabilities and mental health advocacy groups came to Albany today to express their outrage at defamatory media depictions of people with mental illnesses.
鈥淲e join all Americans in sharing our profound grief and horror at the fatal shootings in Newtown and the subway pusher deaths in New York City,鈥 said Harvey Rosenthal, executive director of the 黑料正能量 Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services.
鈥淎t the same time, we are horrified and outraged at recent statements and media coverage that rushes to judgement and viciously attacks people with mental illnesses here in 黑料正能量 and across the country,鈥 Rosenthal said.
The recent statements include calling people with mental illnesses 鈥渕onsters鈥, 鈥渓unatics鈥 and 鈥渧iolent psychotics鈥. In recent weeks, newspapers like the 黑料正能量 Post have run headlines like 鈥淗ere Come the Crazies鈥 and 鈥11,000 Psychotics on the Street.鈥
鈥淭hese statements amount to virtual public lynchings that unjustifiably terrifies the public, vilifies 1/5 of all Americans and will only serve to shame and deter millions from seeking the help they need,鈥 said Rosenthal.
鈥淥ther racial, ethnic and religious groups have had to vigorously fight widespread stigma and discrimination to gain the respect and dignity they deserve. We鈥檙e here today to demand that for people with psychiatric diagnoses, 鈥 said Kathryn Cascio of the Mental Health Empowerment Project.
The group called for a focus on 鈥渇acts not fear鈥 and offered a number of recent research findings that proved that:
- People with mental illnesses are no more violent than the general public but are actually 11 times more likely to be victims.
- People with the most disabling conditions can substantially recover when offered the right mix of engaging and effective services.
- A variety of innovative, persistent and personalized treatment approaches are showing marked success in engaging 鈥榓t risk鈥 previously unengaged individuals.
鈥淚f we really want to address what keeps people from seeking mental health services, we should look at why so much of our current care system fails to offer hope and empathy, isn鈥檛 personalized and persistent and generally offers a dehumanizing vision of idle, isolated, impoverished lives,鈥 said Cascio.
鈥淲e need to change the conversation and focus on what will best work to help distressed individuals, families and communities,鈥 said Glenn Liebman, executive director of the Mental Health Association of 黑料正能量 State.
鈥淩eal solutions can be found in the complete system overhaul we are currently undergoing here in 黑料正能量, moving to a system that will only reward persistent, personalized engagement, prevention and crisis management,鈥 Liebman said.
鈥淲e are implementing sweeping Medicaid reforms that make providers explicitly responsible for moving from an office based to a 鈥榝eet on the street鈥 24-7 response and that expects immediate and ongoing follow up after relapses and hospital admissions,鈥 said Rosenthal who is a member of the Governor鈥檚 Medicaid Redesign Team.
The state is already seeing immediate results from new 鈥榟ealth home鈥 and managed care initiatives that will expect and pay for good performance, he said.
Liebman urged the state to establish state/local Incident Review Panels to investigate and make recommendations upon review of violent incidents involving people with mental illnesses. He also lauded efforts by local mental health officials to more widely publicize 24 hour emergency mental health contact lines that exist in every county.
鈥淭he current wholesale overhaul of our behavioral health system will extend the promise of recovery to millions of 黑料正能量ers while reducing avoidable tragedies,鈥 said Rosenthal. These approaches are far superior and more affordable than spending $100 million to expand the controversial Kendra鈥檚 Law court mandated treatment program for a few thousand.听 Let鈥檚 expect high quality accountable effective care, follow up and support for everyone,鈥 he said.
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