Why the U.S. Mental Health Care System Needs More Places for People to Just Chill Out
On Jan.
18, 2011, Misha Kessler opened the window of his dorm room at George
Washington University, where he was a sophomore, climbed onto the window
ledge and prepared to jump into the winter night. Kessler had been
dealing with anxiety and other mental health issues since the summer.
Earlier that day, after a week without sleep, he'd had his first-ever
panic attack.
Kessler's lack of control over his own
mental state scared him, as did preparing for a six-story free-fall. But
the scariest part of that night came later, when he voluntarily went to
the emergency room. The prospect of going to the psych ward, to join
the real crazy people, Kessler recalls, terrified him more than
deliberating suicide.
"I still had the basic idea of a psych
ward from TV," he said. "But when I got there, the other people were a
lot like me, just experiencing too much stress without the right coping
mechanisms."
In the end, he was glad he went. While
the process of handing over his personal belongings and donning a
hospital gown was by no means pleasant, Kessler knew he needed to get
out of his dorm room and put his fate in someone else's hands. In fact,
he credits his two-night stay in the psychiatric ward with saving his
life. Today, as a suicide prevention specialist, Kessler urges teenagers
and young adults who find themselves in a dark place to go get help,
even if that means checking in somewhere so they don't check out.
Note: Kessler talks about his suicide attempt in the video below.
But Kessler ended up at the hospital
because he didn't see another option. Emergency rooms are designed to
revive trauma victims and pump stomachs, not address mental health
crises. Patients who need immediate psychiatric care endure a drawn-out
intake process that often involves repeatedly explaining why they're at
the ER and waiting hours for beds to free up in a psych unit. It's
re-traumatizing, ineffective and expensive. That's why Illinois created
Living Rooms, state-funded, alternative ER centers for mental health
crises.
The U.S. has radically shifted its approach to
psychiatric care a number of times. During the second half of the 20th
century, a policy of deinstitutionalization resulted in the discharge of
thousands of mentally ill and developmentally disabled Americans from
psychiatric hospitals, many of which subsequently shut down. The policy,
though well-intentioned, received criticism for leaving former
in-patients to flounder.
Similar criticism resurfaced recently, when
studies revealed just how many incarcerated Americans suffer from severe
mental illness. At least 15% of state prison inmates have a psychotic
disorder. Some argue that the U.S. just shifted the burden — jails are
the new mental hospitals. We haven't quite figured out a system of
comprehensive mental health care that doesn't infringe on people's basic
civil rights.
More Living Rooms may be part of the solution.
Illinois opened the first of its five Living Rooms
in 2011 as a non-clinical crisis center for people in the throes of a
mental health meltdown. People can drop in to get immediate help and
access to resources for longer-term care. A mental health crisis, to use
the same definition as The Living Room does, is "a state in which an
individual becomes overwhelmed and their usual coping mechanisms are not
adequate, which leave them with disorganized thoughts and life
processes ... if a crisis state is not properly treated, the condition
can quickly escalate, leading to a mental health emergency."
As the name suggests, the centers are
supposed to feel more like homes than hospitals. When guests walk into
the Living Room, according to a 2014 study published
in the journal Issues in Mental Health Nursing, staff members greet
them "with open arms" and offer beverages — anything to make them feel
at home, supported and in control of their own treatment.
It's really a disarmingly simple idea: Normalize the practice of seeking help and offer people a place to chill out when they feel bad.
Within the mental health field, the Living Room is
thought to be a creative approach, according to Ken Duckworth, medical
director at the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill.
In addition to keeping doctors and
psychiatric nurses on staff, the centers employ peer counselors who have
been through, and emerged from, mental health crises themselves. Their
presence has proven to be a strength of the Living Room model, according
to Living Room coordinator Peter Robichaux. The stubborn stigma
surrounding mental illness often makes people hesitant to seek treatment
and uncomfortable when they do. Peer counselors get it; they've been
there too. As one peer counselor said in the Issues in Mental Health
Nursing study, "We're not going to judge you because we are you."
Kessler, who works at the Campbell Center, a
D.C.-based nonprofit, says that peer support is a resource in hospitals
too. As important as high-quality doctors are, young adults benefit when
relatable liaisons enter the picture.
The Living Room model of care jibes with
psychiatrist Patrick Corrigan's theory of destigmatization. Corrigan, a
researcher at the Illinois Institute of Technology, believes that
destigmatizing mental illness hinges on more people coming out as
mentally ill. We can learn about the causes and rates of various mood
disorders, but living and working alongside people who've openly battled
schizophrenia or bipolar disease is ultimately the way to change public
perception. Corrigan looks to the gay rights movement for comparison.
The movement really took off, he pointed out, when non-straight people
became more visible in everyday life.
The Living Room model also helps stretch the
state's health care budget. During its first year, the original Living
Room had 228 visits from 87 guests, most of them diverted from the ER,
which saved upwards of $500,000.
It's really a disarmingly simple idea:
Normalize the practice of seeking help and offer people a place to chill
out when they feel bad. And while Illinois' Living Rooms stand out in
the U.S., non-clinical mental health care centers are the norm in
Australia. In 2006, the Australian government launched Headspace, a
national network of fully funded health care centers where Australians
between the ages of 12 and 25 go when they're having a tough time.
People can stop in whether they're battling ongoing mental illness or
just feeling stressed and lonely.
The Living Room approach may be catching on
stateside too. Over the past few months, mental health urgent care
centers have popped up on both coasts. Los Angeles County officials
opened one such center in late 2014 to relieve pressure from county
hospitals and jails running low on psychiatric beds. In January, Rhode
Island opened its first walk-in mental health urgent care center for
similar reasons, according to an AP story.
Both facilities seem to skew more clinical than the Living Room, but
they fill the same broad purpose: to be there for people who need help
and provide services specifically tailored to mental illness. One county
supervisor who led the effort in LA, Kaiser Health News reported, described the center as a more humane approach than traditional hospitalization.
It's hard to say that any single service
will fix our mental health care system, but based on history, we're
willing to make big changes. The Living Room model shows that small
changes — a place to go, people to talk to — may be just as important.
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