Some people need help to get help: a personal
reflection on the value of assisted outpatient
treatment.
by Entsminger, Kurt
Editor's note: Assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) stirs the
passions of people in the mental healthcare field like few other issues.
Behavioral Healthcare invited Kurt Entsminger to share his views on AOT
because he not only was recently appointed executive director of the
Treatment Advocacy Center, which supports AOT, but he also is a mental
healthcare consumer.
We want to hear from you as well. Send your letters to
dedwards@vendomegrp.com, or comment on Mr. Entsminger's article
online at www.behavioral.net.
I understand firsthand the difference that effective treatment can
make in allowing someone with a severe mental illness to function
normally again. I have bipolar disorder, like approximately 2.3 million
Americans (almost 1% of the U.S. population). When my mental illness was
untreated, it affected me, my family, my job, and those around me.
Like many people with bipolar disorder, I was first diagnosed with
depression. Eventually that diagnosis was changed to bipolar disorder. I
was an attorney, a litigator, which requires a great deal of focus and
energy. It was not unusual for me to go weeks at a time with minimal
sleep when I was going through a manic phase, and then finish a trial
and go into a deep depression for several weeks. My family will tell you
that it wasn't much fun having me around.
My life as I know it today is possible because I received, and
continue to receive, treatment. So it is no surprise that I believe
strongly in the importance of ensuring that everyone with a severe
mental illness has access to lifesaving treatment.
Yet only about half of the 4 million people afflicted with bipolar
disorder or schizophrenia are receiving treatment on any given day. That
means 2 million people with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder are
untreated, an unfathomable number when you consider the treatable nature
of these illnesses. According to the National Advisory Mental Health
Council, the treatment success rate for bipolar disorder is a remarkable
80%, and the treatment success rate for schizophrenia is comparable to
the treatment success rate for heart disease.
The results of failing to help so many who are so ill are
catastrophic. Far too many people with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder
are warehoused in our prisons or living on our streets, and many
unnecessarily remain at risk for suicide or violence.
Incarceration. At least 10% of the 2.2 million inmates in the
nation's jails and prisons--220,000 individuals--have serious
psychiatric disorders, mostly schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. This
is equivalent to the entire population of Akron, Richmond, or Tacoma.
Homelessness. At any given time, many more people with untreated
severe psychiatric illnesses are living on America's streets than
receiving care in hospitals. Between 150,000 and 200,000 individuals
with schizophrenia or manic-depressive illness are homeless.
Suicide. At least 5,000 individuals who commit suicide each year
are psychotic at the time of their suicide. Suicide is the number-one
cause of premature death among people with bipolar disorder, with 15 to
17% taking their own lives. The rate in the general population is around
1%.
Violence. Incidents like the one at Virginia Tech draw the
attention of media and legislators, and the science and data show that
violence is a reality for a small group of those who remain untreated.
Stigma. Most mental health organizations prefer to ignore or refute
the truth on violence out of some misplaced desire not to stigmatize
everyone with a similar diagnosis. The problem with this approach is
that the violent episodes continue and are themselves the cause of
stigma. Until the violence is stopped by getting treatment to those who
need it, the episodes and resulting stigma will remain.
These consequences of failing to treat people who have treatable
illnesses are, in a word, maddening. This is especially the case when
you consider that for a percentage of those with very severe mental
illnesses, rational thought isn't an option. In other words, they
have no way to escape consequences like these unless someone steps in to
help them.
In my case, those who were closest to me recognized better than I
did that I needed help. My hospitalization and subsequent and continuing
treatment are the reason I'm well today--and that wouldn't
have happened without the love, care, and insistence of my wife.
Some people need help to get help. Those who lack insight into
their illness often require court-ordered treatment if they are to have
any treatment at all. They cannot advocate for themselves because they
do not recognize that they are in peril. Yet instead of rallying around
these sickest people to try to get them the help they need, the mental
health community has become the biggest blocker to making the tool of
assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) more widely available.
AOT saves lives. Seminole County, Florida, ran a model program of
AOT that resulted in a 72% decrease in jail days--a savings of more than
$15,000 per patient. The patients also experienced an overall reduction
of 43% in hospitalization days. The results from Kendra's Law in
New York are similarly impressive: 77% fewer experienced psychiatric
hospitalization; 83% fewer experienced arrest; and 87% fewer experienced
incarceration.
The mental health community actually champions court-ordered
treatment already. In large numbers, they have come out in support of
the humanity of mental health courts, which can order someone into
treatment once he has committed a crime. Yet there is reticence in the
mental health community to publicly support AOT, which provides similar,
if not more, due process protections and allows someone to get the help
he needs before he deteriorates and lands in jail. That is completely
illogical.
I believe it is time to restore common sense to a society that has
literally sacrificed human sanity in the name of personal privacy and an
outdated and unrealistic understanding of what constitutes true civil
rights. I know firsthand what it is like to be hospitalized against your
will. But I also know what it is like to be unable to make a rational
choice.
There is no greater imprisonment than being psychotic. AOT provides
a key to freeing people from psychosis, allowing them to function
normally again. I don't think there is any greater civil liberty
than that. Much good has been done in the name of civil rights, but this
is the horrific twisting of the concept that I cannot abide: that
court-ordering someone who is severely ill and lacks insight into needed
mental health treatment is somehow harming him.
The Treatment Advocacy Center is a national nonprofit organization
dedicated to eliminating barriers to the timely and effective treatment
of severe mental illnesses. TAC takes no money from pharmaceutical
companies. For more information, visit www.treatmentadvocacycenter.org.
Suggested Reading
Amador X. I Am Not Sick, I Don't Need Help! How to Help
Someone With Mental Illness Accept Treatment. Peconic, N.Y.: Vida Press;
2007.
Isaac RJ, Armat VC. Madness in the Streets: How Psychiatry and the
Law Abandoned the Mentally Ill. Washington, D.C.: Treatment Advocacy
Center; 2000.
N.Y. State Office of Mental Health. Kendra's Law: Final Report
on the Status of Assisted Outpatient Treatment. 2005.
www.omh.state.ny.us/omhweb/Kendra_web/finalreport/AOTFinal2005.pdf.
Torrey EF, Knable MB. Surviving Manic Depression: A Manual on
Bipolar Disorder for Patients, Families, and Providers. New York: Basic
Books; 2002.
Torrey EF. Out of the Shadows: Confronting America's Mental
Illness Crisis. New York: John Wiley and Sons; 1997.
BY KURT ENTSMINGER, ESQ
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Kurt Entsminger, Esq, is Executive Director of the Treatment
Advocacy Center.
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