CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2013 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2013 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“PREVENTION PORTION OF STATE’S MENTAL
HEALTH PROGRAM: A NATIONAL MODEL?”
One of the first bits of advice Vice
President Joe Biden received after becoming the point person for shaping new
federal gun control and mental health proposals in the wake of December’s mass
shootings in a Newtown, Conn., elementary school was to follow the California
example.
Copy this state’s strategy for funding
mental health programs, suggested Darrell Steinberg, Democratic leader of the
state Senate. That’s one way, he said, to lessen the chance of deranged
individuals blasting dozens of children and teachers with assault rifles or
machine pistols.
There was more than a little irony in
Steinberg’s suggestion. Only last August, he formally requested a formal audit
of billions of dollars in mental health funds raised by the 2004 Proposition
63, which imposes a 1 percent supplemental tax for mental health care on
incomes over $1 million.
So far, this levy has taken more than
$8 billion from high-income Californians.
But last summer, the Associated Press
reported that tens of millions of Prop. 63 dollars have gone to programs aiding
state residents not diagnosed as mentally ill, including yoga, art and drama
classes, horseback riding and gardening.
The audit results are not yet in, and
there are explanations for some of the expenditures the AP noted. Gardening,
for example, was to attract Cambodian immigrants who might otherwise avoid
mental health services for cultural reasons. Yoga and art therapy can help
stave off some forms of mental illness.
There’s no doubt the Proposition 63
money has been helpful in keeping government-funded mental health care alive
while other programs like in-home care for frail or disabled senior citizens
were severely truncated during half a decade of severe state budget crises.
In 2011, Patricia Ryan, executive
director of the California Mental Health Directors Assn., reported that “The
programs made possible…are as varied as California is diverse.”
She cited the highly-individualized Vietnamese Full Service
Partnership in Santa Clara County, aiming to help Vietnamese adults with
serious mental illnesses like bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. Within a year
after that program started in 2006, participants were using emergency
psychiatric services 28 percent less than before and were hospitalized 65
percent less, while using long-term care facilities 82 percent less than
before. So Proposition 63 has saved insurance companies and that county big
bucks, although no one has put a precise figure on the savings.
Prop. 63-funded programs in Los Angeles
County, Ryan reported, served more than 6,200 persons in 2011, producing a 68
percent reduction in homelessness among those clients and a 53 percent increase
in days spent living independently, along with a 46 percent reduction of time
spent in jails.
Those programs were designed to fit
specific local needs, the result of counties being allowed to choose most uses
of Prop. 63 money.
Ryan also says one provision in Prop. 63 might be most useful in
preventing mass slayings: The measure requires that 20 percent of funds it
raises go to prevention and early intervention in mental illness or substance
abuse. If Colorado or Connecticut had a mandate like that, there’s at least a
chance the Aurora and Newtown massacres could have been prevented.
“If there’s one
part of what we do here that should be adopted nationally, that’s it,” Ryan
said in an interview.
Tending to back that up, Robert Cabaj,
medical director of Community Behavioral Health Services in San Francisco, told
the magazine Psychiatric News that
“intensive case management in the counties (San Francisco added 400 such slots
after Prop. 63 money began flowing) has led to reduced hospitalizations. We
have cut our acute inpatient psych beds by more than half, but have had no
increase in recidivism or emergency services.” So Prop. 63 has definitely
helped prevent some serious problems.
But things are far from perfect here.
An estimated 750,000 Californians in 2011 failed to get mental health treatment
they needed. About half the counties have no inpatient psychiatric services,
suggesting jails are used to hold many persons who actually belong in
hospitals.
And there are complaints Prop. 63
allocations favor new programs for new patients over proven programs serving
longtime patients.
There’s also the fact that Prop. 63’s
proceeds have allowed legislators to divert some previous mental health money
for other uses.
Which means that while California has
seen plenty of positives from Prop. 63, its mental health scene remains far
from perfect, even if one part of the program – prevention and early care –
probably ought to be copied widely.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book "The Burzynski
Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign
to Squelch It," now available in an updated fourth printing. Email him at
tdelias@aol.com
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