March 6, 2007

Too Bad

Too Bad

It was good news for human freedom when the initial announcement was made to stop psychiatric admissions to hospitals. Alas the boondoggle goes on. (Carey Goldberg, "Psychiatric admissions to go on, State's response to mental health cuts postponed," Boston Globe, November 23, 2006)
Personal opinion masquerading as science earns big bucks for the hospitals and for the psychiatric practitioners. It is hard to change an established bureaucracy which contributes to the politicians regularly. Arguing that closing psychiatric hospitals will adversely affect people is disingenuous at best.
The only ones hurt will be the overpaid and over-privileged psychiatric class. It is long overdue to expose the fraud that masquerades as science when it is solely an arbitrary method of social control without due process.
The Department of Mental Health is no more than a taxpayer funded lobbyist for the drug companies, partnering with NAMI, promoting drug treatment. They do not protect the basic rights of humans nor do they protect humans from psychiatric abuses.
The DMH should be phased out of existence. The money saved could be used to house persons who are without one.
--
Roy Bercaw, Editor
Cambridge MA USA

Psychiatric admissions to go on
State's response to mental health cuts postponed
By Carey Goldberg,
Boston Globe Staff
November 23, 2006

The state Department of Mental Health yesterday postponed its plans to halt all admissions to state psychiatric hospitals through at least the weekend. The agency had issued plans to freeze admissions as of yesterday and eliminate some 170 jobs in response to budget cuts decreed by Governor Mitt Romney.
Richard Powers, spokesman for the Office of Health and Human Services, said that the Department of Mental Health's response to the cuts was still under review and that "until that review is done, it's business as usual." The time frame for the review is not clear , but it will not be drawn out, he said.
In addition to freezing hospital admissions and eliminating jobs, the department had planned to make the cuts by reducing the services it offers to the community's mentally ill. The Massachusetts Hospital Association and the Massachusetts Association of Behavioral Health Systems, which represent private hospitals that often care for and stabilize mentally ill patients before transferring them to state hospitals, issued a statement saying they were told the admissions to state hospitals would continue through the weekend.
"This is only a temporary reprieve, and we remain concerned," the statement said. The Romney administration argues that the Department of Mental Health should be able to cut the required 1.1 percent of its $640 million budget without hurting any of the services it offers. Advocates for the mentally ill counter that the state's mental health system is overstrained and that the cuts would hurt staffing and services. The state's psychiatric hospitals tend to serve patients with the most intractable mental illness, as well as those who are hospitalized under a court order.

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