Search This Site




Philadelphia Weekly - The Trouble With Spikol


 

 

 

 

Cost of the War in Iraq
(JavaScript Error)

 

 

« Least Surprising Headline of the Day | Main | Serbian atrocities »

Miami's vices

From Joe, who can always be counted upon for pointed commentary:

"In August, [Florida Department of Children and Families] officials decided to ignore orders from judges that certain inmates be immediately transferred to a hospital. Officials say it wouldn't be fair to jump over others on the waiting list that often has more than 300 names statewide."

I guess ignoring a court order and failing to create a responsive mental health infrastructure is fair in Florida. So much for fairness.

System fails mentally ill inmates, families

Comments

Hi. Yea I think that really is unfair. Andy Behrman (Electroboy) was also placed in a federal prison but he was later released on grounds of being bipolar. I guess mental health issues are not 'as' important as they used to be.

"A sick system: Reform Florida's treatment of mental illness"
http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20071117/OPINION/711170818/1030/OPINION01

But Florida is going to "put its fragmented and much maligned mental-health and substance-abuse-treatment system could be put on the road to permanent recovery for as little as $20 million next year" by decreasing the inpatient population and redirecting the funds released to "integrated specialty-care networks."

"Experts: $20M to fix mental-health system"
http://www.tallahassee.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071115/CAPITOLNEWS/711150344

Haven't we heard this tune before, i.e. close inpatient beds and use the funds released for community services? Where Florida is ranked 48th in the nation for per capita state spending on mental health, will another $20 million dollars achieve all that is being promised?

Words and deeds might intersect but I think it is more likely a case of "systemic anosognosia" and/or wishful thinking. Addressing real issues takes real funding.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

About

self portrait web final.JPG

Liz Spikol is senior contributing editor of Philadelphia Weekly. She writes the award-winning column The Trouble With Spikol, which began as a chronicle of her struggle with mental illness, and has since expanded into humorous musings on everything from graphic novels to how to use a mop. She also writes the paper's book review column, Lit Gloss. This blog -- named one of the Top 10 Bipolar Blogs of 2007 by PsychCentral -- is about mental illness policy, news, personal journeys and more.