Friday, February 25, 2011

As mental health cuts grow, people with psychiatric diagnoses fill jails

From The Texas Tribune:

Dressed in an orange Harris County Jail-issued jumpsuit, Sterling Shepherd sat at a metal picnic table and described what got him into this situation — again.

“I’m extremely mentally ill and extremely intelligent,” said Mr. Shepherd, a 43-year-old with intense brown eyes and a big grin. During a 12-minute interview on Feb. 15, Mr. Shepherd veered in and out of reality, talking at times lucidly about taking medication for his severe bipolar disorder and at others describing how Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. spoke to him through the television and explaining that Pope Benedict XVI is his grandfather.

It was Mr. Shepherd’s eighth stay at the Harris County Jail, a Houston facility the size of two football fields that houses more than 10,000 inmates. He is one of about 2,400 inmates taking psychotropic medications. The jail is the largest mental institution in the state. It has a special unit with 108 beds for the severely mentally ill, where guards wear less-intimidating uniforms, nurses are on duty 24 hours a day and inmates undergo intensive psychiatric treatment.

“We’ve done everything we can do to make it therapeutic,” said Sgt. Bernard Kelly, a supervisor in the jail’s mental health unit.

Some inmates say it is the best mental health care available to them in Houston, and it costs the county about $27 million a year. Harris County officials have seen the number of mentally ill inmates explode since 2003, the last time Texas had a budget crisis and made major cuts. Then, there were fewer than three full-time psychiatrists at the jail. Now, there are more than 15. Often they see the same mentally ill inmates repeatedly.

“It just becomes a chronic cycle,” said Sylvia Muzquiz-Drummond, medical director of the mental health division of the Mental Health and Mental Retardation Authority of Harris County.

As lawmakers consider deeper cuts this year to deal with a budget shortfall estimated at $15 billion to $27 billion, jail officials across Texas are deeply concerned that proposed reductions in community-based mental health treatment will worsen the problem. Without resources in the community, more mentally ill Texans are likely to end up on the streets, in emergency rooms and behind bars, and it will cost local taxpayers even more to care for them.

“We can’t not respond,” said Dr. Michael Seale, executive director of health services at the Harris County Sheriff’s Office. “We can’t not put people in jail.”

Although he disdains the idea of further cutting mental health funding, Representative Garnet Coleman, Democrat of Houston, said lawmakers who are determined to close the budget gap without raising taxes have few other options when it comes to reducing health care expenditures.

“Unfortunately for mental health, at this moment, there isn’t an alternative,” Mr. Coleman said.

State lawmakers are considering proposals that would reduce community-based health care services for adults and children and for community mental hospitals by about $152 million in 2012 and 2013. It is roughly a 20 percent reduction in financing from the previous two-year budget. For community mental hospitals, financing would fall about 3 percent, but the money would be split among five facilities instead of three.

By 2006, Texas already ranked 50th among the states in per capita spending on mental health care, according to the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. The strained budget allows the Harris County mental health agency to serve only about 25 percent of the adults in need and about 18 percent of the children, said Betsy Schwartz, president and chief executive of Mental Health America of Greater Houston.

Currently, about 2,000 people with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and serious clinical depression are on the agency’s waiting list. “We’re already talking about a system that was hemorrhaging,” Ms. Schwartz said, adding that in Houston alone, the proposed cuts would mean up to 2,000 of the 8,500 adults who now receive community-based services would be turned away.

Cutting those services would take a devastating human toll, Ms. Schwartz said, and at an enormous financial cost. When people with untreated mental health problems fall into crisis, it is much more expensive to provide care in an emergency room, jail or crisis center.

The Harris County Neuropsychiatric Center saw a 45 percent increase in crisis patients entering the center from 2008 to 2010, she said. Every time a patient walks into the center in crisis, it costs $800 to perform an initial exam, Ms. Schwartz said. By comparison, it costs about $12 a day for community-based mental health care services.

“It’s not like people are going to disappear and the needs are going to go away,” she said. “It may shift the burden from state dollars to county dollars.”

Patty Wood knows that she would probably be back in jail without the community-based services that help her stay on medication.

“I’ve been incarcerated a lot, because it’s illegal to self-medicate,” said Ms. Wood, 48, who has bipolar and schizoaffective disorders. As of last week, though, Ms. Wood had been clean for about seven months with the help of mental health agency. She is hopeful she can get a job and end the incarceration cycle. “I’m just a person trying to make it,” she said.

Mr. Shepherd, who landed back in jail on Super Bowl Sunday after he attacked a staff member at the Harris County Psychiatric Center, said he hoped that this stint behind bars would be his last. The jail psychiatrist, he said, is adamant that he take his medication. And the jail staff said last week that Mr. Shepherd was more stable than when they had seen him in the past. If he can get help and keep taking his medications on the outside, Mr. Shepherd said, he thinks he can stay stable.

“I’m praying to the Lord Jesus Christ not to come back,” he said.

Jail officials and mental health providers are praying, too, that all the work they have done to help people like Mr. Shepherd and Ms. Wood is not undone by state lawmakers’ budget decisions. If community-based services are not around to help, said Sergeant Kelly, who has worked in the Harris County Jail for more than a decade, he knows he will see them again.

“We let them out the door only to crash and burn,” he said. “We’re setting them up for disaster.”