The Cost of Not Caring

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    The Cost Of Not Caring

    There arerich stories of human suffering all around us couched in terms of financial crisis stories we

    encounter in our news media, in the streets and even in our own families.

    Nevertheless things are getting worse all the time and I have been in the middle of the battle on the same

    losing side as the mental health patients.

    I have been in the middle of mass human suffering which nobody seems to have the power to alleviate.

    For many years, as the situation worsens, I have done what I could. I have been on every front of the

    battle known to me and accessible to me in community mental health centers, the VA, state prisons and

    private, for-profit, insurance-driven treatment centers.

    Sometimes the best service I can offer is not the pills. It is all too often simply listening, and trying to

    come up with some practical ideas to help people navigate a fairly inhuman system.

    I was still in Wichita, Kansas and still a resident training in psychiatry when I started writing a weekly

    question-and-answer newspaper column for the Wichita Eagle (the largest daily newspaper in the state).

    I started tackling the stigma of mental illness early on.

    I asked why the salt-of-the-earth folks of Kansas would often bring home-baked goods, like a pie (I love

    pie) to a next door neighbor who was, say, laid up with a broken leg, while no such goodies were generally

    proffered to the person who had recently been released from the psychiatric unit?

    Not one person ever wrote to me at the newspaper to respond to that one, but I think I know the answer,and the answer is mostly "fear."

    Some of it is fear of the mentally ill individually. This generally encompasses the fear of violence, as

    violent situations involving the mentally ill are generally those reported in the mass media.

    The most prominent in the media is violence in and around schools, mostly done by young people within

    these schools shootings, knifings, rapes and bullying. Just check todays headlines because I cant keep

    up with reporting them all.

    In most cases, the first conclusion people jump toward isa mentally-ill perpetrator.

    Unfortunately too many timesthat is a correct assumption.

    No matter how you slice it, the percentages of the mentally ill who are violent is pretty small -- certainly in

    at least the same order of magnitude as the percentage of the population in general who might become

    violent for various other reasons.

    http://www.usatoday.com/longform/news/nation/2014/05/12/mental-health-system-crisis/7746535/http://www.usatoday.com/longform/news/nation/2014/05/12/mental-health-system-crisis/7746535/http://www.usatoday.com/longform/news/nation/2014/05/12/mental-health-system-crisis/7746535/http://depts.washington.edu/mhreport/facts_violence.phphttp://depts.washington.edu/mhreport/facts_violence.phphttp://depts.washington.edu/mhreport/facts_violence.phphttp://articles.latimes.com/2011/jan/20/health/la-he-mentally-ill-violent-20110116http://articles.latimes.com/2011/jan/20/health/la-he-mentally-ill-violent-20110116http://articles.latimes.com/2011/jan/20/health/la-he-mentally-ill-violent-20110116http://articles.latimes.com/2011/jan/20/health/la-he-mentally-ill-violent-20110116http://depts.washington.edu/mhreport/facts_violence.phphttp://www.usatoday.com/longform/news/nation/2014/05/12/mental-health-system-crisis/7746535/
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    Things like recent divorce, recent unemployment, drug or alcohol intoxication, road rage, and being an

    abuse survivor are more likely than even the most severe and chronic mental illness to provoke violent

    reactions. Nobody seems to be actively avoiding these segments of the population.

    This truth is ignored.

    I spent a lot of time working in prison-type facilities. There was always one "yard," one building, reserved

    for those who had psychiatric illness. The great majority of those who are inside prison do not have any

    kind of psychiatric history or current illness.

    I did admittedly meet plenty of inmates who wanted to be perceived as having mental illness problems,

    since this meant "easy time" on the psychiatric yard, but that is another issue.

    Part of the failure to befriend and socially accept the mentally ill seems to come from free-

    floatingxenophobia.

    I remember reviewing results of epidemiological "catchment area" studies on mental illness. I have beenlooking at this sort of thing for a long time.

    This kind of study takes people from the population at large and looks to see how many of them have

    psychiatric symptoms. The figures for people at large usually come to 80 or 90 percent of the population

    having at least one psychiatric symptom.

    You know people like this. They are obviously not body-flinging themselves at psychiatrists. People hate

    the idea of seeing psychiatrists for a lot of reasons, including "labeling" as being "crazy," even to

    themselves and their families.

    People make an awful lot of decisions emotionally, without carrying out the logic of data and reflection

    upon same. Moreover, people never seem to take history into account, even when they are making

    decisions that are directly relevant to it.

    Dorothea Dixwas a wonderful crusader for the mentally ill. She is generally considered responsible for

    the humane crusade in favor of the establishment of state hospitals to promote more humane ways of

    treating the mentally ill.

    As a native of the Boston area, I will never forget the first time I heard the name of this other (earlier-civil

    war time) girl from Boston.

    I was involved in "on the job training in psychiatry" at Fort Bragg, a Captain in the U.S. Army Medical

    Corps, pointing out some problems with the inpatient unit to the medical command. I thought I was fairly

    temperate, but he told me nobody had taken up the cause of the mentally ill so emotionally since

    Dorothea Dix had come through town on a lecture tour.

    Of course I went to the library to look her up in the encyclopedia right afterwards.

    http://psychology.about.com/od/xindex/g/xenophobia.htmhttp://psychology.about.com/od/xindex/g/xenophobia.htmhttp://psychology.about.com/od/xindex/g/xenophobia.htmhttp://www.biography.com/people/dorothea-dix-9275710#awesm=~oEn2dJSS5E0gaphttp://www.biography.com/people/dorothea-dix-9275710#awesm=~oEn2dJSS5E0gaphttp://www.biography.com/people/dorothea-dix-9275710#awesm=~oEn2dJSS5E0gaphttp://psychology.about.com/od/xindex/g/xenophobia.htm
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    She was anti-slavery, of course.

    I think that every time there has been a major effort to ameliorate human rights, the rights of the mentally

    ill are the subject of champions.

    Like the crusade byPhilippe Pinelat the time of the French revolution.

    OrBenjamin Rush,who signed the U.S. Declaration of Independence. The ones yelling we are part of an

    inhumane system are no longer physicians, like these 18th century heroes of mine

    Most of the arguments in the U.S.A. Today piece linked above are made on financial cost -- not human

    suffering type cost -- while the humanitarian arguments come from testimonials by mentally ill and

    families.

    Congressman Tim Murphy,(R-Pa.) president and CEO, Mental Health America is the man cited in the

    third paragraph of the U.S.A. Today piece. He is a former child psychologist who is now spearheading

    some kind of G.O.P. initiative that I never heard of until now. Now I am no politico, but this tough stufffor me to understand.

    I am old enough that I have learned a lot just by surviving and seeing what happens.

    I will admit that I think of closing Californias state mental hospitals as a Reagan administration decision,

    made basically to cut costs. That decision is now widely regarded as a major failure.Oh, the blame has

    been diffused among many, including even psychiatrists themselves.

    Believe me, physicians in general and psychiatrists in particular are simply not very politically savvy, and

    wield very little control over their own fates. Sure, there was plenty wrong with the old state hospitals

    (like some people who never belonged there happened to be inside them) but the same can be said of our

    over-crowded prisons.

    It does not seem to me, even in retrospect looking at an essentially pre-internet phenomenon, that

    anybody did a thorough enough study of what would happen when these people hit the streets.

    Like many purely-political decisions, it was a knee-jerk reaction to curry the votes of fiscal conservatives

    who would vote to save money no matter what the cost and to appeal to those who think psychiatry is

    the biggest boondoggle since the Ponzi Scheme was invented.

    Curiously enough, the landscape of "regular" inpatient psychiatric care has changed also.

    There are perilously few beds for people whom one would expect to need such care. For instance, such

    beds -- where they exist at all -- seem to be reserved for those who need to be "5150-ed" -- that is,

    hospitalized because they seem to have the will and intent and (maybe even) the means to cause real harm

    to themselves and to other folks, and therefore need to be contained for legal purposes.

    In other words involuntary commitment.

    http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/broughttolife/people/philippepinel.aspxhttp://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/broughttolife/people/philippepinel.aspxhttp://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/broughttolife/people/philippepinel.aspxhttp://www.ushistory.org/declaration/signers/rush.htmhttp://www.ushistory.org/declaration/signers/rush.htmhttp://www.ushistory.org/declaration/signers/rush.htmhttps://murphy.house.gov/healthcare/https://murphy.house.gov/healthcare/https://murphy.house.gov/healthcare/http://www.nytimes.com/1984/10/30/science/how-release-of-mental-patients-began.htmlhttp://www.nytimes.com/1984/10/30/science/how-release-of-mental-patients-began.htmlhttp://www.nytimes.com/1984/10/30/science/how-release-of-mental-patients-began.htmlhttp://www.nytimes.com/1984/10/30/science/how-release-of-mental-patients-began.htmlhttps://murphy.house.gov/healthcare/https://murphy.house.gov/healthcare/http://www.ushistory.org/declaration/signers/rush.htmhttp://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/broughttolife/people/philippepinel.aspx
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    Nobody mentioned treatment, perilously little of which seems to be going on in these contexts.

    I have seen many patients who have been in these units. They generally tell me they have been scared into

    "shutting up" and "taking the damned pills" so they "do not have to go through that again." I have been

    told that insurance companies no longer pay for "voluntary" hospitalizations, and like to monitor how

    someone reacts to new or different medications.

    Often there is nobody in the home competent to do this sort of thing. As an out-patient psychiatrist, I end

    up, usually, with vague instructions to use private hospitals and private insurance -- which usually do not

    work.

    I have often dispatched lower level staff -- who are either overstretched or in some cases, just plain

    disinterested -- to help me figure out how relatively inarticulate patients live their everyday lives.

    Sometimes they are on a neighbor's couch or in the gutter with no hopes of eligibility for any kind of

    known assistance (or shelter), and are ashamed to tell me.

    What they do, instead, is complain to me liberally about other psychiatrists being distant and unfeeling.Although my first impulse was to condemn such behavior (feelings which I would never tell a patient

    about, anyway) I have since realized that the only way most psychiatrists can survive emotionally is to

    retreat into the (almost automated) pill-pushing role that American society has prescribed for them.

    I think this is because their lengthy education has basically priced them out of the market for any of the

    other services for which they have been trained.

    Again, without any serious studies of outcome, people generally get the "psychotherapeutic" or "touchy-

    feely" part of their care from lower-level, poorly trained "team members" rather than degreed

    professionals. Ive been in government institutions (county and state) that use peer-counselors also

    known as formerpatients.

    Wow what a way to save money!

    A psychiatrist cannot often have time or resources to offer empathy, let alone any kind of solution, for the

    grinding open-wound pain of the indigent who must be seen and dealt with on a daily basis. We are often

    at the mercy of an over-booked schedule, determined by administrative people who are more interested in

    churning a high-number of people through the system so as to collect a payment for each person seen.

    It is not uncommon for a doctor to only be allowed a few minutes with each patient which presents a

    challenge to a dedicated care-giver.

    Whether these people are actually helped is not the primary concern.

    Psychiatrists can only become emotionally battered.

    There are always good people in every situation and Ive met some great and caring people in my travels

    -- but they tend to move on and the drones and bureaucrats stay put.

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    Me, as I look back, I think my entire family, both immediate and extended, either was a psychiatric

    patient or should have been. Thus for this reason, I have very informal, often even comfortable family-

    like relationships with patients -- and this usually works fairly well.

    Still, people do not do things for the reason they say they do. We cut sweetheart deals tolet corporations

    profit,we spend money on wars, and we seem to have created a sad underbelly of society where people areill, and cannot afford treatment for their illness.

    Drug companies grow, with the marketing of inexpensive and easy-to-market drugs that often --

    particularly in psychiatry -- seem to me to be more expensive with no more (and probably fewer ) benefit

    than what has come before.

    A review of psychotropic sales and use could be found in many places, such asthis documentary film,free

    to view on YouTube.

    As for the spending money on wars since the 21stcentury commenced -- I am not at all convinced we are

    giving enough quality treatmentto the veterans we already have.

    Where does all this come from?

    Hubris, I think.

    The United States seems to somehow believe that we are the police of the world, and uses this belief to put

    a lot of money into wars and make a lot of money for people who appear to be corporate giants, but

    definitely are NOT the mentally ill, or other people dying from a lack of healthcare.

    Where the heck does this idea come from?

    Our earliest well-documented enunciation of said idea was the Monroe Doctrine, which James Monroe

    seems to have cleverly hidden in his 1823 annual message to congress.

    Basically, this is the idea is that other European countries, with "puppet" monarchs and designs upon

    those lovely U.S. states ever so rich in natural resources should stay in Europe and leave the U.S. alone.

    Early 19th century? I am not sure who was listening or how closely, but that was when we went into a

    period of expansion all over the North American Continent (south of the Canadian border.) Talk about

    the pot calling the kettle black.

    We called it "Manifest Destiny," according to a prominent journalist in 1845. We took over the whole

    continent to the West Coast of America.

    We decimated Native American entities that considered themselves "sovereign."

    We kicked out the Mexicans, annexing Texas -- and not stopping until we had conquered about half of

    their land and made it our own.

    http://www.solidarity-us.org/site/node/52http://www.solidarity-us.org/site/node/52http://www.solidarity-us.org/site/node/52http://www.solidarity-us.org/site/node/52http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/making-a-killing-the-untold-story-of-psychotropic-drugging/http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/making-a-killing-the-untold-story-of-psychotropic-drugging/http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/making-a-killing-the-untold-story-of-psychotropic-drugging/http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/making-a-killing-the-untold-story-of-psychotropic-drugging/http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/06/05/va-scandal-sloan-gibson-phoenix/10033543/http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/06/05/va-scandal-sloan-gibson-phoenix/10033543/http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/06/05/va-scandal-sloan-gibson-phoenix/10033543/http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/06/05/va-scandal-sloan-gibson-phoenix/10033543/http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/making-a-killing-the-untold-story-of-psychotropic-drugging/http://www.solidarity-us.org/site/node/52http://www.solidarity-us.org/site/node/52
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    Oy!

    That is Hubris!

    I thought for a while, based on schoolbooks, we had done this mainly to acquire the lovely, unobstructed

    ocean view you could get from Malibu, or even Long Beach.

    This conduct caused us a lot of problems.

    Sometimes, in the fiery eyes of Mexican immigrants, I am convinced I see a sense of proud entitlement to

    the land that first was theirs.

    But wait, there's more.

    Numerous political, economic, and social consequences;basically really big growth and somehow, this

    was an expression of some kind of white supremacist and (dare I say it) Christian ideology.

    Double Oy!

    If you doubt for a moment that the United States is a Christian Theocracy, let me share some observations

    gleaned from my native Jewish vantage point.

    What are termed our American-core ideas have deep roots. I do not see them getting changed easily.

    There was a chart on the door of my sixth grade classroom that showed the influence over time of various

    countries, and ended with the color representing the U.S. taking most of the thickness of the diagram,

    clearly being the most influential country in the world.

    We aren't the top guys right now, but we could be.

    Changing beliefs is not for sissies.

    Speaking as both a veteran of the US Army and a medical doctor, I believe we should be spending money

    taking care of our own instead of supporting military expansion and excursions.

    Then, I believe, we can be "number one."

    A good market would understand how to redefine number one.

    The USA is We The People not a political party, not a corporation, not a military organization.

    Somewhere, along the line, we will have to start thinking about the welfare of humans our citizens who

    are guaranteed rights -- something we have done preciously little of late.

    http://users.humboldt.edu/ogayle/hist110/unit3/political.htmlhttp://users.humboldt.edu/ogayle/hist110/unit3/political.htmlhttp://users.humboldt.edu/ogayle/hist110/unit3/political.html
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