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22 <br />MENTAL HEALTH TASK FORCE REPORT <br />ATTACHMENT D <br />COMMENTARY ON STATE MENTAL HEALTH REFORM <br />News & Observer <br />Published Sun, Apr 30,.,2006 <br />Jean P. Fisher -Staff Writer <br />For mentally ill, reform falls short <br />Dorothea Dix Hospital was home to Kathi Dunphy's 39-year-old daughter, Jacki, for six yeazs. But a few months ago, <br />Jacki started on a new medication for bipolar disorder that helped her reach her best emotional health in years, so her <br />doctors decided she was well enough to leave. <br />But instead of going home, Jacki went to a Cary rest home, where most residents are frail and elderly. The place is clean <br />and the staff seems friendly, but Dunphy wonders how long her daughter will stay healthy there. Jacki is prone to <br />depression and thoughts of suicide, and her health deteriorates without structure and daily activities. "Last week, she said <br />she'd give me $20 if I'd take her back" to Dix, Dunphy said. <br />Trading one institution for another was not what state leaders promised five years ago when they revamped how and <br />where people are treated for mental illness. People like Jacki -- The News & Observer agreed not to reveal her surname <br />-- were supposed to be able to live in small groups or independently in their hometowns. They were supposed to have <br />medical appointments, get job training, learn life skills, socialize -- all within their communities, outside of institutions. <br />Most everyone involved in the mental health system says those ideals are unmet. This year, however, there are signs that <br />mental health care might finally get the significant funding that was promised. When state legislators return next week, <br />mental health funding will be among the top issues. <br />Carmen Hooker Odom, state Health and Human Services secretary, acknowledges that transforming the state's mental <br />health system has been difficult. "To create that change, you have to go through the process of destroying the existing <br />system," she said. "You don't have to be a psychiatrist to know that people do not like change." <br />Many people who aze dismayed at how mental health reform has progressed agree in principle with its goal. The idea is <br />to give people with brain disorders every chance to live full, productive lives amid family and friends. "It's a good idea - <br />- Itotally embrace it," said Debra King, executive director of CASA, a Raleigh agency that manages affordable housing <br />for people with mental illness. "But it's how you pull it off. I just can't figure out how we could have planned so long for <br />things to have turned out so poorly." <br />Not a lucrative field <br />Five years into the reform process, the state still faces a desperate shortage of subsidized housing for the mentally ill. <br />Patients released from state mental hospitals aze frequently dischazged to homeless shelters or, like Jacki, to adult care <br />homes. And despite predictions that free market forces would ensure an ample supply of mental health programs, many <br />communities have not seen private businesses clamoring to set up new services. <br />It's not a lucrative field. Many patients live on disability income and aze covered by Medicare and Medicaid, which <br />typically pay less than market rates for care. Others are uninsured or covered by private insurance that strictly limits <br />access to treatment and services. <br />Compounding matters, private businesses aiming to offer new programs didn't know what services the government <br />would pay for, and at what rate. The state Medicaid program was expected to publish that information years ago; it came <br />last month. <br />20 <br />