(10-5-16) Everywhere I travel to give speeches, I hear the same complaint: there are no treatment beds readily available for persons who are in a mental health crisis.
Psychiatric “boarding” in emergency rooms has become a national problem.
This week, the Treatment Advocacy Center is turning a spotlight on the inpatient bed shortage by launching a national campaign called: A Bed Instead.
In an email to me, TAC’s Executive Director John Snook said the campaign is designed to educate and engage.
Everyone in mental health knows the system is in crisis. But we too often find that those not personally affected by mental illness simply have no idea just how bad the levels of care can be. This campaign sets out to change that.
It shouldn’t be only those with a mental illness and their families who are disgusted by a system that substitutes jail cells for treatment beds. Or one that eliminates nearly all of the crisis care beds as a budget cutting measure and relegates those in need to ER hallways. These are human rights issues that impact us all, whether we have or know someone who has a severe mental illness… or not.
The aBedInstead campaign will bring these issues to the public, creating a movement that can no longer be ignored.
During a recent trip to California, I heard about 13 hour waits in emergency rooms for patients experiencing a psychotic break. In Washington state, I was told it could be up to 24 hours. One North Carolina jurisdiction told me that it could take as long as three days to find a bed. It is not uncommon for troublesome patients to be handcuffed to gurneys or restrained by the police while waiting for a bed.