General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHere is some information about Santa Barbara County Mental Health
My place of work is a few miles from where the shooting took place. I work for the alcohol, drug and mental health dept of the county. I am not on the medical side but I know of our programs because I do reporting that pays for it.
First off we don't have enough beds to put everyone in a hospital. The hospitals are locked facilities. We try to keep people out of locked facilities if possible. Only severe cases are in locked facilities. Police do have the ability to send someone to the hospital if they are a threat to themselves or society. This decision is in conjunction with clinicians on a mobile crisis team. They are available 24/7 as are doctors.
We have 24/7 mobile crisis teams, crisis residential homes for crisis intervention.
We use drugs. All our clients do not become suicidal because of drugs. We do not give them out like candy and they are not an alternative to hospitalization.
You cannot predict when someone with mental illness will act out as this shooter has done.
Mentally ill people still retain their civil rights.
As in any shooting the shooter was a good guy before becoming a bad guy.
The common denominator here is the guns.
etherealtruth
(22,165 posts)... the family of the mass murderer attempted everything within their power to obtain treatment and/or help for their son before he went off on a murder spree. The mental health professionals appear to have used the tools at their disposal. They essentially had very very few options ... and they tried those options.
"The common denominator here is the guns." .... that's how I see it.
I see these as two separate issues that have tragically overlapped .... the paucity of options for the mentally ill and the issue of guns in our society
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)...and those he ran down with his car