April 25, 2025

Continued crackdown on mental illness

 Axios - Cities and states that once championed progressive approaches to mental health and drug use are continuing their yearslong course reversal, and are increasingly open to involuntary commitment.

The push to get people with severe mental illness help — especially those who are homeless — is a response to public backlash, but may be outpacing the availability of high-quality treatment for them...

Some cities are responding to 2024 election results, in which voters elected candidates to office based on who spoke to their desire for addressing "this nexus of addiction, mental illness and homelessness," said Keith Humphreys, a professor of psychiatry at Stanford University.

  • Humphreys authored a recent Brookings Institution report that found policy frameworks in the Pacific Northwest region that had decreased law enforcement's role in drug policy have since seen public and policymaker support plummet, and have been rolled "back as fast as [they] had been implemented."
  • San Francisco voters elected Mayor Daniel Lurie, who told the New York Times that his success depends on "if we grow our economy, if we get people off the streets and into mental health beds, if people feel safe walking down our streets again." Lurie last month unveiled his vision for addressing the city's homelessness and behavioral health crisis.
  • And some changes are stemming from last year's Supreme Court decision allowing state and local governments to prohibit sleeping outdoors.
  • In Silicon Valley, San Jose's Democratic mayor recently called for arresting homeless people after they resist shelter three times, the NYT recently reported. The goal is to move them into mental health treatment, but they could end up serving jail time.

Between the lines: One clear trend is the growing support for the involuntary commitment of mentally ill patients.

  • Oregon state lawmakers are considering changing the civil commitment standard, making it easier for judges to order people in crisis into hospital care. Gov. Tina Kotek has called for lowering that legal threshold, as well as creating hundreds of more treatment beds and better linking people in homeless shelters to mental health services.
  • New York Gov. Kathy Hochul earlier this year proposed making it easier to take people having a psychiatric crisis to a hospital involuntarily and requiring better coordination after patients leave the hospital.
  • Homelessness and mental illness are also becoming big issues in New York City's mayoral race.

And, of course, California has been implementing its "Care Courts," which allow civil court judges to order adults into monitored plans that can include treatment for severe mental illness, while New York City has been rolling out Mayor Eric Adams' controversial involuntary removal directive.

The programs aren't free from criticism, despite other blue states' willingness to take similar actions.

  • Early data has shown that the California initiative — signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2022 — has fallen short of its early goals, per KFF Health News.
  • Adams' plan has been criticized as ineffective by a City Council report, which also raised questions about racial disparities within the program, per CBS NewsMORE


No comments: