The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law


 

 

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A New Vision for Public Mental Health is posted in PDF format, suitable for printing. You will need the free Acrobat Reader to view and print these files.

To order a pocket folder with the law and advocacy suggestions, visit our online bookstore. For a file of the law alone by email (indicate whether Word or WordPerfect or RTF), contact Michael Allen.

A New Vision of Public Mental Health

A Model Law to Provide a Right to
Mental Health Services and Supports

The public mental health system increasingly rations care in such a way that people with serious mental illnesses must "hit bottom" before receiving the services and supports they need to live successfully in the community. In many communities, jails and prisons have become the largest providers of mental health services, and homeless shelters and nursing homes have become housing of last resort for people with mental illnesses. While not appearing on the mental health department's budget line, the costs of care for people with mental illnesses are borne by these other systems--and by taxpayers. Clearly, it is fiscally more prudent, as well as more humane, to address mental health needs before they reach the point of crisis.

The Bazelon Center has set out to reshape the debate about mental health system reform by developing and disseminating a model law for adaptation by states and localities. An Act Providing a Right to Mental Health Services and Supports seeks to transcend the recurring debate about inadequate funding by providing a legally enforceable entitlement to recovery-oriented mental health services and supports, in sufficient amount, duration, scope and quality to support recovery, community integration and economic self-sufficiency. Under a statute based on this template, states or counties may define eligibility broadly or narrowly, but may not turn away any eligible person.

The United States Supreme Court held in Olmstead that it is against the law to segregate people with disabilities in large institutions and recognized that it would be wrong to place people with serious mental illnesses into community settings "devoid of the services and attention necessary for their condition." The model law seeks to prohibit such neglect by the mental health system and to empower people with mental illnesses to be full partners in their treatment and recovery.

The Bazelon Center is eager to work with policymakers and advocates at the state or local level to explain how the model law might be implemented. We hope to facilitate information-sharing about efforts in the various states and plan to issue occasional reports in addition to postings on this website. If you would like to receive these reports by mail, send your name and postal address to:

Michael Allen
Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
1101 15th Street NW, Suite 1212
Washington DC 20005-5002
Fax: 202-223-0409
michaela@bazelon.org

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  Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
1101 15th Street, NW, Suite 1212
Washington, DC 20005

Phone: 202-467-5730
Fax: 202-223-0409
Email: webmaster @ bazelon.org

 
Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
1101 15th Street, NW, Suite 1212
Washington, DC 20005

Phone: 202-467-5730
Fax: 202-223-0409
Email: webmaster@bazelon.org