Community Mental Health Panel
Community Mental Health Panel at the Appalachian Ohio Mental Health & Housing Conference on October 7, 2019 that Executive Director, David Browne attended.
ATHENS,
Ohio – Of the many difficult stories about mental health issues that
emerged at Monday’s Appalachian Ohio Mental Health & Housing
Conference, Robin Harris’ description of a traumatized Purple Heart
winner hit the hardest.
Harris,
executive director of Gallia, Jackson & Meigs Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health Board, described a young Iraq war Marine
veteran who was hit with enemy gunfire during his service in Fallujah,
Irag, The ambush severely injured him and killed his best friend. He
returned home to Meigs County with a Purple Heart, a military award
given to those injured in battle, and wartime trauma buried deep in his
soul.
Harris said the young man couldn’t get the
long-treatment he needed for trauma, was in and out of rehabilitation
for addiction to painkillers, and eventually turned to crime and ended
up in prison.
“His mother told me, “I watched my son go off the prison with his Purple Heart sitting on my mantle,’” Harris said.
The
failure of the system to treat the young man “is a picture of where we
are today with our mental health system and veterans. It breaks my
heart,” Harris said.
There were other troubling stories: a
young person with mental illness who waited in emergency room care for a
week before getting treatment; people driving hours to get mental
health care because of closed rural hospitals; a critical lack of
housing for people in recovery, and waves of suicides rippling across
Appalachian Ohio.
But there were positive signs, too,
including $37 million from Gov. Mike DeWine’s administration for mental
health crisis services, expanded specialty court dockets, greater
cooperation between state and local agencies, a proposed new mental
health crisis center in southern Ohio, more housing opportunities, and
the first statewide suicide prevention plan.
The conference
sponsored by the National Alliance on Mental Illness Ohio, Ohio
University and the Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield Foundation
attracted 200 people, many of them mental health professionals, for
discussions on mental health treatment, housing, transportation and
related issues.
A keynote speaker was Douglas O’Brien,
regional Midwest director for the U.S Department of Health & Human
Services. He said the federal government is not typically good at
long-range planning, instead focusing on budget-to-budget funding. In
the meantime, he said, “Rural America is facing a crossroads, most
importantly in health care.”
O’Brien said federal officials are working to make a better connection between physical health and mental health care.
Former
Gov. Ted Strickland, moderator of two panel discussions at the event,
and a former prison psychologist, said locking up people with mental
illness is not a viable solution because mental health treatment is
scarce behind bars. “Prisons are an unforgiving environment for anyone,
but especially for anyone with mental illness.
“Not every
dysfunctional, angry person has a mental illness and that’s something
that needs to be stressed continually,” Strickland said.
Robin
Harris was one of six county mental health board directors on a panel
discussion of the progress and problems of mental health treatment at
the local level.
While all agreed more money is necessary,
David Browne of the Washington County Behavioral Health Board asked for
financial incentives to lure more mental health service providers to
underserved rural southern Ohio. Otherwise, waits of multiple weeks for
what should be emergency services will continue, he said.
“When
a person makes a call for help they need to get it today,” Browne said.
“We need to get help today. We don’t need it in five years.”
All
the directors bemoaned the fact that people seeking crisis mental
health treatment in hospitals may wait 48 to 72 hours before a bed can
be found. For children, it can be even longer. Brown said one child had
to stay in the hospital emergency for a week before being placed.
Sue
Shultz of the Adams, Lawrence and Scioto Counties Board said services
are scarce in rural areas due to a lack of hospitals. “People drive an
hour to an hour and a half from Adams County to get services,” she said.
Often transportation is a problem.
An afternoon panel
focused on community health and housing. Dr. Tiffany Inglis, director of
Medical Operations for Anthem, said the health care organization has
recognized that housing is critical to building bridges to community
mental health. “Mental health is not a short-term fix,” she said.
Anthem
provided $200,000 to help fund the Adam-Amanda Mental Health
Rehabilitation Center, a 16-bed crisis stabilization and hospital
step-down treatment facility in Athens. NAMI Ohio spearheaded the effort
to establish the facility, the first of its kind in the state.
The
state has provided $118 million for overall housing programs through
the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services.
Housing
specialist Sally Luken, who works with NAMI Ohio, said many irons in
the fire for housing for people in mental health treatment, including
renovated and new-build apartments, large and small housing projects,
financial incentives to landlords, and help with access to utilities.
Tony
Coder, director of the Ohio Suicide Prevention Foundation, stressed the
need for suicide education and prevention programs. He said Ohio is
developing a suicide prevention plan, but is the last state to do so.
Appalachian Ohio is hard hit by suicide, with nine of the top 10
counties with the highest suicide rates per 100,000 population. Meigs
County topped the list at 21.5 per 100,000, followed by Jackson at 19.9
and Hocking County at 19.7.
“If you’re having thoughts of
suicide, reach out to somebody,” Coder said. “Suicide cannot be
discussed in private and it cannot be ignored.”
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