Community Mental Health Services

views updated May 14 2018

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES

HISTORICAL OVERVIEW

The history of mental health services in the United States is one of good intentions followed by poor execution; of promises to deliver better services for less cost; and of periodic revolutionary change with neither the evidence to support the new programs or the financial investment to see if the new approach could be effective if carried out adequately. While it can be argued that community mental health services date back to the beginnings of American history, until the mid-1950s, public mental health in the United States was largely institutionally based and entirely state supported. Early in U.S. history, local communities either served the mentally ill with family-centered care or expelled individuals who came from elsewhere. However, with the massive population growth of the United States in the nineteenth century, mentally ill individuals came to be concentrated, and for the most part poorly served, in local jails, prisons, poorhouses, and almshouses. Appalled by these circumstances, Dorothea Dix, a teacher, undertook a crusade to create mental hospitals in the United States modeled after the York Retreat in England. These family-like asylums would provide "moral treatment," which was believed to be curative at the time. Dix's attempt to get the federal government to take responsibility for the mentally ill in America was ultimately thwarted by a veto from President Franklin Pierce. Dix then turned to the states and was remarkably effective in getting all states to establish hospitals for state-of-the-art treatment of the mentally ill. A federal role in supporting mental health services would wait another one hundred years until the development of Medicaid, Medicare, and Supplemental Security Income.

While state hospitals started out with great promise, in many places they had deteriorated by the mid-1950s into little more than human warehouses. In post-World War II America, a new crusade began to replace state hospitals with community-based care. The experience of World War II psychiatrists with care at the front lines, the exposure of the dismal conditions of state hospitals by conscientious objectors and journalists, the development of antipsychotic medications with the discovery of the effectiveness of chlorpromazine, and the states' interests in shifting costs for caring for the mentally ill to the federal government all contributed to what, after the fact, came to be known as deinstitutionalization.

The community mental health era in the United States was launched with the 1963 passage of the Community Mental Health Centers Act, signed into law in by President John F. Kennedy. This law provided federal funding, which ultimately led to the establishment of more than 750 community mental health centers (CMHC) throughout the United States. However, the CMHCs tended to care for people with mental health problems (i.e., problems in living) much more than for those people with serious mental illness who were historically cared for by the states.

DEFINITION OF COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES

Mental illness, as described in the 1999 Surgeon General's Report on Mental Health, "is the term used to define all diagnosable mental disorders. Mental disorders are health conditions characterized by alterations in thinking, mood or behavior (or some combination thereof) associated with distress and/or impaired functioning" (p. 5). While many service systems do not consider alcohol and other drug-related disorders (e.g., alcohol dependence) to be mental disorders, and many service systems do not include the dementias and what historically have been called organic mental disorders as disorders subject to treatment in the "mental health system," the surgeon general includes these disorders, which are clearly diagnosed within the framework of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSMIV) of the American Psychiatric Association. Mental health problems, signs, or symptoms that do not meet the intensity or duration to meet criteria for a mental disorder can also warrant active intervention, according to the surgeon general.

Mental health services are diverse and variable, depending on the sector where the services are being provided and the profession and training of the person providing the services. While in the past there tended to be strong divisions between a "medical model" and a "rehabilitation model" for service provision, most providers now accept an integrated bio-psycho-social (some add a spiritual component as well) model. The notion of recovery, in which the individual with the disorder self-determines how best to cope with and overcome the limitations of the disorder, is gaining ascendancy as well. Other key principles in community mental health are continuity of care and the need to assertively bring services to those reluctant or unable to seek them on their own. These principles have led to the development of multidisciplinary teams, case management services, and assertive community treatment teams.

ORGANIZATION

As the Surgeon General's Report indicates, treatment for mental illness and mental health problems is scattered and loosely coordinated into what can best be considered a de facto mental health system. The report indicates that there are actually four major components of this de facto system from which mental health services can be received: the specialty mental health sector, consisting of psychiatrists, psychologists, psychiatric nurses, and social workers trained to treat persons with mental disorders; the general medical/primary care sector, consisting of general health care professionals (nonpsychiatric physicians and nurse practitioners); the human services sector, consisting of nonmedical social services, school-based counseling, vocational rehabilitation, residential rehabilitation, criminal justicebased services, and religious professional counseling; and the volunteer support network sector, with self-help and other groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous, peer counseling, and support services. According to the surgeon general, about ten percent of the adult population in the United States use mental health services in the health sector in any one year, about evenly divided between the general health and mental health specialty sectors. About five percent receive services from social service sector agencies, schools, religious, or self-help groups.

The organization of specialized mental health services has included a private system and a public system. The private system was comprised of psychiatric hospitals, both free-standing and units located within acute care hospitals, and psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, and counselors practicing individually or in groups. The public system was made up primarily of state-or county-operated or not-for-profit organizations. The private system served persons with employer-provided health insurance coverage or those who could afford to pay for the services themselves. The public system served persons who were considered medically indigent.

The public and private systems have become more and more defined by reimbursement than by setting or organization. State and local funding provide the majority of financial support for mental health services, with the federal government assuming a growing role. Federal funding includes the Community Mental Health Block Grant, Medicaid (approximately 60 percent federal and 40 percent state or local), plus other specialized funding programs.

Over time, the distinction between private and public clients has become blurred, as it has become increasingly difficult to distinguish public mental health services from those delivered by the private system. The surgeon general suggests that public system services refer both to services directly provided by government agencies (e.g., state or county hospitals) and to those services supported by government resources. Thus, any service supported by Medicaid would be considered a public system service. Such services are increasingly provided by private sector agencies or practitioners. The growth of managed care in the private system has produced interest on the part of states to experiment with managed care models for the public system. As managed care practices evolved within the private sector, limiting scope, duration, and frequency of services, and subsequently limiting or reducing payment, private providers have become more interested in populations and reimbursement sources historically served by the public system (e.g., clients with Medicaid).

SOURCES OF FUNDING

According to the Surgeon General's Report, the period of 1986 through 1996 experienced slower growth in spending for mental health treatment (over 7 percent per year) than general health care expenditures (over 8 percent per year). Medicare, Medicaid, and other federal program spending for mental health services grew more slowly than overall program spending during this same period. A number of reasons for the slower growth rate may be possible, including the influence of managed care cost containment methods on mental health treatment (improving efficiency while increasing the risk of imposing barriers to service access); policy changes at the federal and state level, limiting spending in state hospitals and emphasizing outpatient care delivered in community settings; and increasing service delivery in nonspecialty sectors, such as nursing homes and criminal justice settings (i.e., jails and prisons).

The significance of federal participation has made Medicaid policy, along with state mental health authorities, an increasingly important influence in the delivery of mental health care. Private health care insurance has historically been more limited in its coverage for mental illness than for general health care. Those private insurers that did not simply refuse to cover treatment for mental illness limited coverage for acute care services in particular and other services in general by placing annual and lifetime limits on care and by increasing deductibles and co-payments. The public sector's historical role as the provider of "catastrophic care" for the uninsured and the underinsured provided a means for the private sector to minimize its financial risk and focus on the care of less impaired persons, most of whom had health insurance coverage through their employers. As late as 1988, the model of "unmanaged fee-for-service" was used by the majority of private insurance companies as the payment mechanism. However, in the past decade this model was used by only 15 percent of companies, giving way to managed care arrangements and techniques fundamentally changing the way in which health care resources are allocated.

While managed care may be able to effectively reduce the cost of mental health services, great care must be taken to assure that efforts to contain costs do not have adverse effects. That is, incentives that are part of prepaid contracts can result in inadequate care for those suffering from a mental illness. Particularly at risk are persons with less severe mental health problems, who may be completely denied access to services, and the most seriously mentally ill, who may be undertreated. In addition, private HMOs, because of the limitations on scope, duration, and frequency of services inherent to managed care, routinely refer individuals to public sector agencies who are assessed as inappropriate for time-limited service or upon the exhaustion of benefits for a particular episode of care. This effectively results in cost shifting of substantial expenses to already challenged public budgets. In order to know whether or not access and quality of care can be improved or at least maintained with managed care, development or improvement of the capacity to assess functional improvements is necessary.

Parity in the coverage of mental health care would require all insurance companies to offer the same coverage for mental illness as for all other disorders. Parity legislation along with managed care may actually result in reduced costs; however, the ability to measure access and quality should be integral to any well-designed plan.

ADEQUACY OF MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES

The Surgeon General's Report disclosed that only about one-third of those with a diagnosable mental disorder receive treatment in a one-year period. This is believed to reflect both problems with access and availability of services as well as the problem of the stigma still associated with receiving mental health care. The availability of adequate mental health services throughout the United States is highly variable. Depending on how services are organized and funded, there is marked variation even within a given city, county, or state.

The state of mental health practice clearly lags behind the state of knowledge. A striking example of this is the treatment of schizophrenia, probably the prototype serious mental disorder. The Schizophrenia PORT study in 1998 describes several scientifically proven interventions effective in the treatment of schizophrenia. Yet, when actual practices are examined, few communities adequately provide any of the effective treatments. Even the use of antipsychotic medication was woefully inadequate in the systems studied.

As many states have downsized and closed state hospitals, there has been an infusion of funds from the institutions into community-based programs. However, even in states with a coherent and well-considered plan to shift funding to community sites, the transfer has not been dollar for dollar. In Ohio, for example, with a financing plan where dollars were to follow patients as hospitals were downsized, only approximately fifty cents of every dollar transferred from the hospitals actually made it to the communities.

The effect of inadequately funded and suboptimally delivered mental health services are the shames of deinstitutionalization: co-morbidity, homelessness, and criminalization. Increasing numbers of people with serious mental disorders struggle with substance abuse disorders. Despite estimates that half or more of seriously mentally ill patients have co-morbid substance abuse disorders, few systems of care provide integrated behavioral health treatment for both problems. Only integrated treatment has been shown to be effective.

It is estimated that 30 to 40 percent of the homeless have serious mental disorders (and many more have substance use disorders). A more recent phenomenon is the criminalization of the mentally ill. A report from the U.S. Department of Justice estimated that by mid-1998 there were 283,800 mentally ill offenders in the nation's jails and prisons, representing 16 percent of state prison inmates, 7 percent of federal inmates, and 16 percent of jail inmates. This represents more than four times the number of individuals in the nation's state hospitals. It has been frequently pointed out that the largest institution for the mentally ill in the United States is the Los Angeles County Jail. As this problem has been increasingly recognized by the criminal justice system, creative efforts have begun to move patients back from the criminal justice (punishment) system to the mental health (treatment) system. Diversion programs are being examined in a number of communities around the country. Pre-arrest diversion programs such as the Memphis Crisis Intervention Team facilitate interactions between police officers and the mental health system that make referral for treatment preferable to arrest, especially for nonviolent acts related to symptomatic mental illness. Post-arrest diversion, like the mental health court program started in Broward County, Florida, attempts to use the court therapeutically to persuade mentally ill individuals to accept treatment in lieu of criminal prosecution. While these and other programs show great promise, they are not likely to be successful unless the treatment system to which people are diverted is adequately funded and organized. This is the challenge facing the public mental health system in the new millennium.

Mark R. Munetz

William Zumbar

(see also: Dementia; Depression; Dix, Dorothea; Homelessness; Managed Care; Mental Health; Prison Health; Schizophrenia; Substance Abuse, Definition of )

Bibliography

American Psychiatric Association (1994). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition. Washington, DC: Author.

Ditton, P. M. (1999). "Mental Health and Treatment of Inmates and Probationers." In Bureau of Justice Special Reports. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, NCJ 174463.

Essock, S. M., and Gordon, H. H. (1995). "States' Embrace of Managed Mental Health Care." Health Affairs 14:3444.

Goldman, H.; Frank, R.; and McGuire, T. (1994). "Mental Health Care." Critical Issues in U.S. Health Reform, ed. E. Ginzberg. Boulder, CO: Westview.

Grob, G. N. (1994). The Mad among Us: A History of the Care of America's Mentally Ill. New York: The Free Press.

Hay Group (1998). Health Care Plan Design and Cost Trends: 1988 through 1997. Arlington, VA: The National Association of Psychiatric Health Systems and Association of Behavioral Group Practices.

(1999). Health Care Plan Design and Cost Trends: 1988 through 1998. Arlington, VA: The National Association of Psychiatric Health Systems and Association of Behavioral Group Practices.

Isaac, R. J., and Armat, V. C. (1990). Madness in the Streets: How Psychiatry and the Law Abandoned the Mentally Ill. New York: Free Press.

Lehman, A. F., and Steinwachs, D. M. (1998). "Translating Research into Practice: The Schizophrenia Patient Outcomes Research Team (PORT) Treatment Recommendations." Schizophrenia Bulletin 24:110.

(1998). "Patterns of Usual Care for Schizophrenia: Initial Results from the Schizophrenia Patient Outcomes Research Team (PORT) Client Survey." Schizophrenia Bulletin 24:1120.

McKusick, Mark T.; Kline, D.; Harwood, H.; and Genuardi, J. (1998). National Expenditures for Mental Health, Alcohol, Drug Abuse Treatment, 1996. Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

Steadman, H. J.; Barbera, S. S.; and Dennis, D. L. (1994). "A National Survey of Jail Diversion Programs for Mentally Ill Detainees." Hospital and Community Psychiatry 45:11091113.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (1999). Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General. Rockville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Center for Mental Health Services, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Mental Health.

Community Mental Health

views updated May 11 2018

Community Mental Health

Definition

Definition

Community mental health is a decentralized pattern of mental health or other services for people with mental illnesses. Community-based care is designed to supplement and decrease the need for more costly inpatient mental health care delivered in hospitals. Community mental health care may be more accessible and responsive to local needs because it is based in a variety of community settings rather than aggregating and isolating patients and patient care in central hospitals. Community mental health assessment, which has grown into a science called psychiatric epidemiology, is a field of research measuring rates of mental disorder upon which mental health care systems can be developed and evaluated.

Community mental health centers

In the United States, an increase in community mental health care delivery began in the 1960s when President John F. Kennedy signed the 1963 Community Mental Health Centers (CMHC) Act (Public Law #88-164). Growing community mental health capacities were intended to complement and mirror trends toward fewer hospital stays and shorter visits for mental illness. This restructuring of mental health service delivery has occurred in the context of evolving fiscal responsibilities, however. The goals and practices of community mental health have been complicated and revised by economic and political changes.

The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) initially developed a CMHC program in the 1960s. CMHCs were designed to provide comprehensive services for people with mental illness, locate these services closer to home, and provide an umbrella of integrated services for a catchment area of 125,000-250,000 people. CMHCs were designed to provide prevention, early treatment, and continuity of care in communities, promoting social integration of people with mental health needs.

Competing public interests

At the outset, CMHCs were providing outpatient care to people with less severe, episodic, or acute mental health problems. In the 1980s, more people with serious mental illness began using CMHCs, due in part to deinstitutionalization, and following the redirection and capping of federal funds for local mental health care. With growing awareness of the homeless mentally ill, state-funded CMHCs faced new challenges, and their work became fragmented according to catchment areas of responsibility, leaving some urban centers overburdened, while others maintained locally funded operations, limiting responsibility for their area only.

The growth of local community mental health centers was an example of competing governmental interests and authorities. Growing numbers of CMHCs were mandated federally and to be funded by local communities, bypassing state control. This growth in outpatient capacity was later used to complement decreases in inpatient hospital care, or deinstitutionalization, which reduced the costs of diminishing and state-funded mental hospitals.

Policies to improve public mental health care

Community mental health centers were the first of several programmatic attempts to improve mental health care in the latter part of the twentieth century. A second was when the federal government recommended Community Support Programs (CSPs) in 1977-1978 in response to problems associated with deinstitutionalization. CSPs focused on providing direct care and rehabilitation for the chronically mentally ill. However federal support for mental health care and CMHCs in particular was reduced in 1980-1981, with the repeal of the Mental Health Systems Act and the federal budgeting actions that cut funding and provided it instead through block grants to states.

A third initiative has been to expand the national capacity for children’s mental health care under the Child and Adolescent Service System Program (CASSP), beginning in the 1980s. Principles for this system of care included a continuum of services, including mental health. The expansion of mental health classification systems and the Diagnostic and Statistical

KEY TERMS

Catchment —In mental health, a term that refers to a particular geographical area served by a particular mental health agency.

Psychiatric epidemiology —A field of research for establishing the incidence, distribution or prevalence, and control of mental disorders in a population, including the sum of the factors controlling the presence of mental disorders.

Manual of Mental Disorders, or DSM, has helped identify and treat a growing number of children and youth. A fourth initiative was a joint effort by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the department of Housing and Urban Development. Their Program on Chronic Mental Illness (PCMI) promoted the integration of regional mental health authorities in nine cities. Coordinated local mental health systems run by local mental health authorities remain an important goal of mental health policy. As this program ended, another program, Access to Community Care and Effective Services and Supports (ACCESS) began in 1993, ending in 1998. This nine-state demonstration project targeted homeless populations with mental illness.

Finally, many private and public health systems have moved towards managed mental health care, which has become also known as behavioral health care. This form of cost containment is a constellation of organizational reforms, financing systems, and regulatory techniques. Managed care, which began its expansion throughout health care in the 1990s, provided mental health care policy new challenges. While federal health policy and medical assistance provide reimbursement for mental health care and for people with mental illness, the regulation of these systems has grown increasingly complex.

The United States Department of Health and Human Services has developed the Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services Program for Children and Their Families with the goal of improving the delivery of mental health services to families with children and adolescents who have serious emotional disturbances. According to their information, as many as two-thirds of children and adolescents in the United States do not receive the mental health services they need. This fraction in absolute numbers translates to as many as 6.3 million children. The program is designed to bring together various child-ren’s mental health programs into a single plan or system of care, led by the family. Grants from this program, which was first authorized in 1992, target improvements and expansions of such systems.

Resources

BOOKS

Aneshensel, Carol, and Jo Phelan, eds. Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Kluwer Academic, 1999.

Scheid, Teresa, and Allan Horwitz, eds. Handbook for the Study of Mental Health. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999.

PERIODICALS

Grob, Gerald. “Government and Mental Health Policy: A Structural Analysis.” Milbank Quarterly 72.3 (1994): 471–500.

Rothbard, Aileen B., So-Young Min, Eri Kino, and Yin-Ling Irene Wong. “Long-Term Effectiveness of the ACCESS Program Linking Community Mental Health Services to Homeless Persons with Serious Mental Illness.” The Journal of Behavioral Health and Services and Research 31 (2004): 441–49.

ORGANIZATIONS

American Psychiatric Association. 1400 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20005. <http://www.psych.org>.

American Sociological Association. 1307 New York Ave., Washington, DC 20005-4701. <http://www.asanet.org>.

National Institute of Mental Health. 6001 Executive Boulevard, Rm. 8184, MSC 9663, Bethesda, MD 20892-9663. (301) 443-4513. <http://www.nimh.nih.gov>. This agency also maintains a Web site with information about how to locate community mental health services locally. It is available at: <http://www.nimh.nih.gov/healthinformation/gettinghelp.cfm>.

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS), Department of Health and Human Services. 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville MD 20857. <http://www.samhsa.org>.

Michael Polgar, PhD
Emily Jane Willingham, PhD

Community mental health

views updated Jun 27 2018

Community mental health

Definition

Community mental health is a decentralized pattern of mental health, mental health care, or other services for people with mental illnesses. Community-based care is designed to supplement and decrease the need for more costly inpatient mental health care delivered in hospitals. Community mental health care may be more accessible and responsive to local needs because it is based in a variety of community settings rather than aggregating and isolating patients and patient care in central hospitals. Community mental health assessment, which has grown into a science called psychiatric epidemiology, is a field of research measuring rates of mental disorder upon which mental health care systems can be developed and evaluated.

Community mental health centers

In the United States, a modern increase in community mental health care delivery began in the 1960s when President John F. Kennedy signed the 1963 Community Mental Health Centers (CMHC) Act (Public Law #88-164). Growing community mental health capacities were intended to complement and mirror trends toward fewer hospital stays and shorter visits for mental illness (see Deinstitutionalization ). This restructuring of mental health service delivery has occurred in the context of evolving fiscal responsibilities, however. The goals and practices of community mental health have been complicated and revised by economic and political changes.

The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) initially developed a CMHC program in the 1960s. CMHCs were designed to provide comprehensive services for people with mental illness, locate these services closer to home, and provide an umbrella of integrated services for a catchment area of 125,000-250,000 people. CMHCs were designed to provide prevention, early treatment, and continuity of care in communities, promoting social integration of people with mental health needs.

Competing public interests

At the outset, CMHCs were providing outpatient care to people with less severe, episodic, or acute mental health problems. In the 1980s, more people with serious mental illness began using CMHCs, due in part to deinstitutionalization, and following the redirection and capping of federal funds for local mental health care. With growing awareness of the homeless mentally ill, state-funded CMHCs faced new challenges, and their work became fragmented according to catchment areas of responsibility, leaving some urban centers overburdened, while others maintained locally funded operations, limiting responsibility for their area only.

The growth of local community mental health centers was an example of competing governmental interests and authorities. Growing numbers of CMHCs were mandated federally and to be funded by local communities, bypassing state control. This growth in outpatient capacity was later used to complement decreases in inpatient hospital care, or deinstitutionalization, which reduced the costs of diminishing and state-funded mental hospitals.

Policies to improve public mental health care

Community mental health centers were the first of several programmatic attempts to improve mental health care in the latter part of the twentieth century. A second was when the federal government recommended Community Support Programs (CSPs) in 1977-78 in response to problems associated with deinstitutionalization. CSPs focused on providing direct care and rehabilitation for the chronically mentally ill. However, federal support for mental health care and CMHCs in particular was reduced in 1980-81, with the repeal of the Mental Health Systems Act and the federal budgeting actions that cut funding and provided it through block grants to states.

A third initiative has been to expand the national capacity for children's mental health care under the Child and Adolescent Service System Program (CASSP), beginning in the 1980s. Principles for this system of care included a continuum of services, including mental health. The expansion of mental health classification systems and the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders has helped identify and treat a growing number of children and youth. A fourth initiative was a joint effort by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the department of Housing and Urban Development. Their Program on Chronic Mental Illness (PCMI) promoted the integration of regional mental health authorities in nine cities. Coordinated local mental health systems run by local mental health authorities remain an important goal of mental health policy.

Finally, many private and public health systems have moved towards managed mental health care, which has become also known as behavioral health care. This form of cost containment is a constellation of organizational reforms, financing systems, and regulatory techniques. Managed care expanded throughout health care in the 1990s, providing new challenges to mental health care policy. While federal health policy and medical assistance provide reimbursement for mental health care and for people with mental illness, the regulation of these systems has grown increasingly complex.

While the ideals of community mental health were supplemented with new ideals in the years following the CMHC Act, they were not forgotten. Thanks to the work of NIMH, Medicare and Medicaid legislation (1965), and Supplemental Security Income legislation (1972), communities were able to provide mental health care for growing populations in need. National epidemiological studies in the 1980s and 1990s reinforced the large-scale need for mental health care, as CMHCs and subsequent organizational forms provided services to the nation.

Resources

BOOKS

Aneshensel, Carol and Jo Phelan, editors. Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Kluwer Academic, 1999.

Scheid, Teresa and Allan Horwitz, editors. Handbook for the Study of Mental Health. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999.

PERIODICALS

Grob, Gerald. "Government and Mental Health Policy: A Structural Analysis." Milbank Quarterly 72, no. 3 (1994): 471500.

ORGANIZATIONS

American Psychiatric Association. 1400 K Street NW, Washington D.C. 20005. <http://www.psych.org>.

American Sociological Association. 1307 New York Ave., Washington DC 20005-4701. <http://www.asanet.org>.

National Institute of Mental Health. 6001 Executive Boulevard, Rm. 8184, MSC 9663, Bethesda, MD 20892-9663. (301) 443-4513. <http://www.nimh.nih.gov>.

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS), Department of Health and Human Services, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville MD 20857.<http://www.samhsa.org>.

Michael Polgar, Ph.D.

Community Mental Health Centers

views updated May 29 2018

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTERS

Prior to the nineteenth century, mental illnesses were often regarded as moral, spiritual, or supernatural problems. The accepted treatment involved, at best, isolation in mental asylums. Dramatic changes took place internationally in public attitudes about the mentally ill in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Several prominent mental health professionals developed and applied fresh ideas about public health, bringing about the evolution of an improved, state-controlled psychiatric hospital system. The concepts of disease prevention and cure were considered in psychiatry for the first time, and several powerful mental health advocacy groups were born. In the United States, an influx of experienced doctors returning home after treating combat-related mental disorders in World War II, combined with the discovery of effective psychiatric medicines like chlorpromazine, spurred the belief that severe mental illnesses could be cured.

The modern community mental health movement emerged in the 1960s in an effort to improve the psychiatric treatment of a particular group of patients, known as the severely and persistently mentally ill (SPMI). By the early 1960s, state hospitals had become a financially burdensome system of warehouses for the SPMI. In 1963, President John F. Kennedy invited "a bold new approach" to the treatment of the SPMI. Congress developed a plan for deinstitutionalization, or depopulation of the state psychiatric institutions, in favor of a federally funded system of community-based mental health centers (CCMHC).

According to the plan, government funding would be reduced over eight years. As the eight-year deadline approached, it became clear that the clinics could not function without federal funds, and the deadline was extended. In the 1980s, the Reagan administration passed a law to fund the clinics with federal block grants that would ultimately expire, leaving the CMHCs without federal funding. In contrast to the optimistic projections endorsed by the Reagan administration, it seems clear that the cost of caring for the SPMI will always be, to some extent, the responsibility of the government. What remains unclear is to what degree public funds will be used in this endeavor.

CMHC treatment applies several basic concepts.

  1. Fixed responsibility. The CMHC remains active in the long-term care of its assigned patients, regardless of whether the patient is hospitalized, in crisis, temporarily lost to follow-up, or stable.
  2. Community collaboration. The success of the CMHC depends on the ability of staff members to collaborate with local law enforcement officials, social service providers, government agencies, hospitals and clinics, and community leaders.
  3. Outreach. CMHCs employ diverse methods to introduce services to the homeless and other difficult-to-reach groups.
  4. Integration of services. The multiple needs of the SPMI require an active, organized, multiagency treatment system, with the CMHC serving as a central manager for this system of services.
  5. Continuity of care. Consistent, effective treatment relationships can be established by pairing patients with treatment teams on a long-term basis in which the same staff members directly provide outreach, evaluation, and follow-up care.
  6. Respect for patients' civil rights. Decisions regarding patients' medications and overall psychiatric care are made with the patient's input and consent whenever possible, including the concept of least restrictive alternatives, which recognizes patients' rights to receive treatment in a setting that balances individual freedom with the safety of the individual and the community.

Several functional elements comprise the CMHC, each addressing particular needs of the SPMI in specific ways. Crisis and emergency services are necessary to evaluate patients when they are acutely ill or suffering from overwhelming symptoms and to direct them to crisis treatment resources. Some CMHCs have mobile teams that can be dispatched to assess patients at home or on the streets. Brief hospital treatment is reserved for patients who are suddenly unable to deal with their symptoms in the community environment despite CMHC support. The main goal of acute hospitalization is to rapidly stabilize patients until they can safely return to the community. Rarely, usually after multiple brief hospitalizations in a limited time period, long-term hospital treatment may be recommended for some patients.

Long-term treatment in the CMHC system is provided in an outpatient clinic setting. Several professions are involved in providing treatment, but the main specialties represented are psychiatry, social work, and nursing. These disciplines provide medications, emotional support, personal advocacy, and organization of social networks. Although CMHCs are effective for many populations, the homeless SPMI remain a particularly complex group to treat. The size of this group is difficult to compute accurately, but estimates suggest that at least one-third of homeless people suffer from mental illnesses. Providing services remains a difficult challenge for society.

Todd Mitchell

Stuart J. Eisendrath

(see also: Substance Abuse, Definition of )

Bibliography

Kaplan, H. I., and Sadock, B. J., eds. (1995). Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry, 6th edition. Baltimore, MD: Williams and Wilkins.

Naierman, N. et al. (1978). Community Mental Health Centers: A Decade Later. Cambridge, MA: ABT Books.

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