Tale of Two Counties: Bexar County Texas Acted, Fairfax County Virginia Talked

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6-8-15 During my travels, I’ve discovered that most communities with good jail diversion programs got them because of a strong leader, usually a judge, a sheriff or a mental health advocate. Yesterday (Sunday June 7), the Washington Post published an Op Ed piece that I wrote about the difference between a community where leaders took action and Fairfax County, Virginia, where I live. Where does your community fit? Is it moving forward or are your leaders sitting on their hands?

What Fairfax can do now for the mentally ill

There’s been enough talk about treatment for the mentally ill. It’s time for Fairfax County to act!

The Washington Post Local Opinion Page
By Pete Earley

If Natasha McKenna had lived in Bexar County, Tex., instead of Fairfax County, the 37-year-old would have received treatment for her schizophrenia rather than dying after being stunned by a deputy sheriff four times with 50,000-volt shocks from a Taser while her arms and legs were shackled and her face covered with a hood.

More than a dozen years ago, Fairfax and Bexar County officials decided to investigate jail-diversion programs that would direct people such as McKenna into community treatment for mental disorders instead of into jail.

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Murphy Introduces Revamped Mental Health Bill: Will It Fly This Time Around?

114TH CONGRESS 1ST SESSION

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Mr. MURPHY of Pennsylvania introduced the following bill to make available needed psychiatric, psychological, and supportive services for individuals with mental illness and families in mental health crisis, and for other purposes.

Rep. Tim Murphy (R-Pa.) introduced a new version of his Helping Families In Mental Health Crisis Act on Thursday (June 4rd ) and it contains compromises aimed at appeasing critics while keeping changes that should please his initial supporters.

I’ve read the 173 page bill twice and have asked for reactions from NAMI’s top lobbyist, Mental Health America, the Treatment Advocacy Center, the Bazelon Center For Mental Health Law, and the National Disabilities Rights Network. I also exchanged emails with D. J. Jaffe at Mental Illness Policy.Org. who testified before Murphy’s subcommittee and has been one of Murphy’s strongest backers. Jaffe was especially helpful in explaining parts of the bill to me. However, any mistakes that follow in this rushed review are my own.

Here’s a quick analysis of what Murphy, along with Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-Tx) have reintroduced. You can read the bill on your own here.

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Democrats Balking At AOT Language In Tim Murphy’s Bill — Will He Compromise?

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Photo is from Treatment Advocacy Center’s announcement of Rep. Tim Murphy’s award. Pictured with Dr. E. Fuller Torrey

(6-1-15) The question being asked on Capitol Hill is whether Rep. Tim Murphy (R-Pa.) will drop a requirement in his mental health legislation that would require states to begin using Assisted Outpatient Treatment as a condition of receiving federal mental health dollars.  Under AOT, as it is known, states can require persons with a diagnosed mental illness to take anti-psychotic medication if that medication has proven to help him/her in the past and he/she has a documented history of violence or repeated hospitalizations.

It is a hot button issue for those who oppose forced treatment but is supported by many parents.  It also is one of the main pillars in Murphy’s Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act, which had been steamrolling through the House during its last session until Democrats introduced a poison pill bill that kept Murphy’s bill stuck in a committee.

Murphy certainly gave no hints that he was willing to abandon AOT when he appeared May 20th at a Capitol Hill rally that was sponsored by the Treatment Advocacy Center and attended by more than a hundred family advocates.

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New Movie Shows Successful Ways To Defuse Confrontations In Jails and Prisons

Six minute CODE Trailer from NAMI, TN from Dixie Gamble on Vimeo.

The National Alliance on Mental Illness Tennessee has created a training film specifically aimed at correctional officers. It is called CODE, an acronym for Correctional Officers De-escalation Education. Filmmaker Dixie Gamble gained unprecedented access to the Tennessee state prison system where she interviewed inmates and correctional officers. She also spoke to me and numerous mental health experts including LEAP Institute’s Dr. Xavier Amador, NAMI’s Ron Honberg and Dr. Ken Duckworth, and CIT Expert Sam Cochran. The film is narrated by Steve Lopez, author of the best-selling book that inspired the film The Soloist.

NAMI Tennessee Executive Director K. Jeff Fladen announced that the World Premier for CODE will be held Thursday, June 18th, at the Belcourt Theater in Nashville at 7:30 p.m.. Tickets are $15 and will be used to help defray the cost of the film. CODE also will be shown at this year’s NAMI Convention in San Francisco on July 8th. I will be in the audience for that event.

We know that Crisis Intervention Team training has revolutionized how police departments interact with individuals who are in the midst of a psychotic break. Now, CODE offers us training specifically aimed at Correctional Officers. Given that jails and prisons have become our new mental asylums, this is an important film. Please circulate the trailer, make your local correctional departments aware of CODE and spread the word.

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Helping Calm A Delusional Passenger: A Peer Specialist Comes To the Rescue

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Mental Illness Crisis at 35,000 Feet

By Gabe Howard

When I saw the young woman reach for the cockpit door on a recent cross-country flight, I knew there was going to be trouble.

 A few moments earlier, I had watched her come down the aisle to use the lavatory at the rear of the aircraft near where I was sitting. She tried to open its door but couldn’t. She tried again.

 A flight attendant noticed and told her the bathroom was occupied and that she would need to wait her turn.

 The woman insisted the door was just stuck and kept struggling with it.

 I was sitting close enough to see the woman’s eyes and what I saw troubled me.  Total anxiety. The fear and confusion radiating off her was as clear as day to me because I had experienced panic and anxiety attacks.

 The flight attendant suggested she try the rest room in the front of the aircraft. The woman started to cry, gasp for air, and whimper unintelligibly, as she returned up the aisle.

Mental Illness can cause confusion.  This confusion, coupled with desperation and fear, can lead to frightening outcomes. When she reached the front, she started to grab various handles in an attempt to gain entry to the bathroom. One of those handles was the cockpit door.

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Join Me Tuesday Night Speaking About RESILIENCE

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If you live in the Fairfax County area, please join me Tuesday night for an informal talk about RESILIENCE, the book that I helped Jessie Close write about her struggles with addiction and bi-polar disorder.

Mental Health Awareness Month: Meet the Author: Pete Earley
Cascades Library  21030 Whitfield Pl, Potomac Falls, VA 20165
Tuesday, May 19, 7:00 pm
Pete Earley will discuss his new book, Resilience: Two Sisters and a Story of Mental Illness, written in collaboration with Jessie Close. The book tells of the Close sisters’ journey; from a cult school in Switzerland, to the Belgian Congo where their father became a surgeon in the war ravaged republic, to boarding school in the US, where Jessie first started to exhibit symptoms of severe bipolar disorder (she would later learn that this ran in the family, a well-kept secret). Through a series of destructive marriages, Glenn was always by Jessie’s side and it was not until Jessie’s son Calen entered McLean’s psychiatric hospital that Jessie herself was diagnosed. Fifteen years and twelve years of sobriety later, Jessie is a stable and productive member of society.
Book sale and signing to follow.