CMHS Consumer Affairs E-News
July 22, 2003, Vol. 03-60
PRESIDENT'S MENTAL HEALTH COMMISSION RECOMMENDS
TRANSFORMING AMERICA'S MENTAL HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
President Bush's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health today presented
its final report Achieving the Promise: Transforming Mental Health Care in
America to the President, as part of a week-long recognition of the
anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The product of a year
of study, the report finds that the nation's mental health care system is
beyond simple repair.
The CMHS Consumer Affairs E-News will release consumer-related excerpts of
the report in a subsequent E-News.
Building on research, expert testimony and input from over 2,300
consumers, family members, service providers and others, the report
concludes that "traditional reform measures are not enough...". Instead,
it recommends a wholesale transformation that involves consumers and
providers, policymakers at all levels of government, and both the public
and private sectors.
Commission Chair Michael F. Hogan, Ph.D., Director of the Ohio Department
of Mental Health, declared "The time has long passed for yet another
piecemeal approach to mental health reform. For too many Americans with
mental illnesses, mental health services and supports they need are
disconnected and often inadequate. The commission has found that the time
has come for a fundamental transformation of the Nation's approach to
mental health care. This report provides the President with a roadmap for
that transformation. The destination is recovery. We ask consumers, family
members, service providers, other members of the mental health community
and all Americans - to join us on that journey."
The commission finds that the current system is unintentionally focused on
managing the disabilities associated with mental illness rather than
promoting recovery, and that this limited approach is due to
fragmentation, gaps in care, and uneven quality. These systems problems
frustrate the work of many dedicated staff, and make it much harder for
people with mental illness and their families to access needed care.
Instead, the commission recommends a focus on promoting recovery and
building resilience-the ability to withstand stresses and life challenges.
The approach recommended by the commission will move toward full community
participation for children and youth, adults, and older Americans with
mental illnesses-instead of school failure, institutionalization,
long-term disability, and homelessness. The commission presents the
President with six goals and a series of specific recommendations for
federal agencies, states, communities, and providers nationwide. Together,
working through both the public and private sectors, the recommendations
would achieve the needed transformation in care, and put limited resources
to their best use.
The goals the commission articulates underscore the urgency and magnitude
of the changes it proposes. The commission believes that Americans must
come to understand that mental health is integral to their overall health,
and recommends that mental illnesses be addressed with the same urgency as
other medical problems. The stigma attached to mental illness, which
discourages people from seeking care, must be eliminated.
The commission finds that transforming mental health care demands a shift
toward consumer and family-driven services. Consumers' needs and
preferences, not bureaucratic requirements, must drive the services they
receive. To achieve that goal, the commission recommends changes in
federal programs, upgraded state responsibility for planning effective
services, and placing consumers and their families at the center of
service decisions.
Members of minority groups and people in rural areas, the commission
finds, have worse access to care, and often receive services that are not
responsive to their needs. As a result, the burden of mental illness is
heavier for these individuals. The commission urges a commitment to
services that are "culturally competent"-acceptable to and effective for
people of varied backgrounds.
The commission's review finds that too often, mental illness is detected
late not early, and that as a result, services frequently focus on living
with disability, not the better outcomes associated with effective early
intervention. Therefore, the commission recommends a dynamic shift in
care, moving toward a model that emphasizes early intervention and
disability prevention. As the panel notes, "early detection, assessment,
and linkage with treatment and supports can prevent mental health problems
from compounding and poor life outcomes from accumulating..."
Achieving this goal will require greater engagement and education of first
line health care providers - primary care practitioners - and a greater
focus on mental health care in institutions such as schools, child welfare
programs, and the criminal and juvenile justice systems. The goal is
integrated care that can screen, identify, and respond to problems early.
The commission also notes that a majority of adults-even those with the
most serious mental illness-want to work, but are held back by poor access
to effective job supports, incentives to remain on disability status, and
employment discrimination.
The commission finds that effective services and supports validated by
research find their way into practice too slowly. It calls for a more
effective process to make "evidence-based practices" the bedrock of
service delivery. This will require that payers of mental health care
reimburse such practices, that universities and professional groups
support training and continuing education in research-validated
interventions. Acknowledging significant progress in research on mental
illnesses, the panel urges the elimination of the 15-20 year lag between
the discovery of effective treatments and their wide use in routine
patient care. It highlights the need for accelerated and relevant research
to promote recovery and, ultimately, to cure and prevent mental illnesses.
The commission recommends that the mental health system move more
effectively to harness the power of communications and computer technology
to improve access to information and to care, and to improve quality and
accountability. With strong protections for privacy, these technologies
can improve care in rural areas, help prevent medical errors, and reduce
paperwork.
Throughout the report, the commission identifies private and public-sector
model programs that provide examples of how aspects of mental health care
have been transformed in selected communities.
These examples of innovation-across America, across the age span, and
addressing many needs-illuminate how dramatic change is possible, and
serve as beacons for the broader improvements recommended by the
commission.
With presentation of the report to the President, the charge to the
commission has been fulfilled. Its findings, goals and recommendations are
designed to be assessed and carried forward not only by federal agencies
and offices, but also by states and communities, and public and private
providers, nationwide. The commission urges all shareholders in mental
health to work together to make recovery from mental illness the expected
outcome.
The President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health was established by
Executive Order 13263 on April 29, 2002. The commission's work has been an
essential part of the President's commitment - embodied in the New Freedom
Initiative - to eliminate inequality for Americans with disabilities. The
document released today responds to the legal requirement for a final
report of the commission. Additional information about the commission and
both its Interim and Final Reports are available on the Internet at
www.MentalHealthCommission.gov. Print copies of the commission's final
report can be obtained by calling the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration's National Mental Health Information Center at
1-800-662-4357 or 1-800-228-0427 (TTD).
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