Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People get to choose to do things that are not objectively the best for them in this society, and once you are on that slope it isn’t easy to draw a defensible line to prevent sliding down it. (To be clear: I don’t think we should get off that slope. However, I also think OP doesn’t have a lot of experience with mental health.)
I know that one of my moms friends from a highly regarded college was murdered by Union Station after they closed the institutions and familys couldnt involunarily commit. She descended jnto madness and homelessness and obviously vulnerability on the streets.this story repeats every day.
With respect, compared to being a seriously mentally ill person or having a close family member who is, this is not much experience with mental health. I’m glad for you for it—it’s objectively unpleasant to experience. But you need to accept that you are running your mouth about how to fix or change a situation the constituent parts of which you don’t really know much about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People get to choose to do things that are not objectively the best for them in this society, and once you are on that slope it isn’t easy to draw a defensible line to prevent sliding down it. (To be clear: I don’t think we should get off that slope. However, I also think OP doesn’t have a lot of experience with mental health.)
I know that one of my moms friends from a highly regarded college was murdered by Union Station after they closed the institutions and familys couldnt involunarily commit. She descended jnto madness and homelessness and obviously vulnerability on the streets.this story repeats every day.
With respect, compared to being a seriously mentally ill person or having a close family member who is, this is not much experience with mental health. I’m glad for you for it—it’s objectively unpleasant to experience. But you need to accept that you are running your mouth about how to fix or change a situation the constituent parts of which you don’t really know much about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People get to choose to do things that are not objectively the best for them in this society, and once you are on that slope it isn’t easy to draw a defensible line to prevent sliding down it. (To be clear: I don’t think we should get off that slope. However, I also think OP doesn’t have a lot of experience with mental health.)
I know that one of my moms friends from a highly regarded college was murdered by Union Station after they closed the institutions and familys couldnt involunarily commit. She descended jnto madness and homelessness and obviously vulnerability on the streets.this story repeats every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People get to choose to do things that are not objectively the best for them in this society, and once you are on that slope it isn’t easy to draw a defensible line to prevent sliding down it. (To be clear: I don’t think we should get off that slope. However, I also think OP doesn’t have a lot of experience with mental health.)
I know that one of my moms friends from a highly regarded college was murdered by Union Station after they closed the institutions and familys couldnt involunarily commit. She descended jnto madness and homelessness and obviously vulnerability on the streets.this story repeats every day.
I think the issue is much more with the people who don’t attend “highly regarded colleges” who have even fewer options. Certainly rounding up everyone living in the streets around Union Station is a solution to a problem, but it creates other problems and is also not the right way to handle the situation.
In DC, the issue is generationally poverty, community violence, addiction, and a failing education system. I was going to say that access to employment is also an issue, but frankly I think if we could fix issues related to those other things, employment opportunities would be more widely available. But in DC specifically, the combination of insane cost of living and generational poverty have made it extremely difficult for anyone to break out.
Anonymous wrote:Yes it started with closing the institutions.
Yes there is not enough funding. Mental health services for people whose families are taking care of them is a separate topic imo - there needs to be reforms but it’s just a different area of concern.
People on the streets need to be put into housing on cheaper land with round the clock medical care. It’s ok if they only have a bed and not a room, let alone a house to themselves. Someone needs to monitor their medications. They should not be allowed to camp out on city streets.
Your suggestion is to target the end point and not the crises and problems that get people to that end point. Also, you are talking about taking away free will. At least some people on the streets are choosing their fate. Not everyone wants housing and medical care and even less what institutional living. If that were the case, people would be going to homeless shelters instead of staying on the streets.
I don't think that either suggestion is the answer to the problem. If you intervene at an earlier point, then maybe you can avoid reaching the point where someone ends up on the streets.
And, yeah, I am taking care of my child. But, I'm going to die and the street is a very real possibility. And, it wouldn't be the first time because even though we are willing to do everything we can, people have free will.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People get to choose to do things that are not objectively the best for them in this society, and once you are on that slope it isn’t easy to draw a defensible line to prevent sliding down it. (To be clear: I don’t think we should get off that slope. However, I also think OP doesn’t have a lot of experience with mental health.)
I know that one of my moms friends from a highly regarded college was murdered by Union Station after they closed the institutions and familys couldnt involunarily commit. She descended jnto madness and homelessness and obviously vulnerability on the streets.this story repeats every day.
Anonymous wrote:People get to choose to do things that are not objectively the best for them in this society, and once you are on that slope it isn’t easy to draw a defensible line to prevent sliding down it. (To be clear: I don’t think we should get off that slope. However, I also think OP doesn’t have a lot of experience with mental health.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't just indefinitely cage a person. That would be an abuse of involuntary commitment.
I don't think of mental health facilities as cages, and you are correct --it is very difficult to commit someone in this country against their will. However, if people were committed and treated likely they would not die in this horrible manner. If they stop taking medication, re commit them and treat them again.
But horrible things have also happened in mental health facilities.
Here's a review that shows that according to various studies, 7 - 8 % of inpatient psychiatric patients experience sexual assault, and that's in an era of brief hospitalizations. The longer term hospitalizations you seem to be proposing would send that number up.
https://ps.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.202000038