California State Mental Hospitals Plagued With Assaults And Rising Violence

Alcoholics Anonymous Hospitals & Institutions volunteers visit mental hospitals, and offer AA to the mentally ill. Even though I understand they feel they are trying to help the ‘addict still suffering’. I do not understand how they invite upon release, mental patients to outside local AA meetings, that they also have children and teens going to the very same meetings.

Read the story below about the growing violence by mental patients in the state of California. One killed a hospital worker. Why are they continuing the practice of bringing the mentally ill, violent felons and sexual offenders to co-mingle with minors?

California state mental hospitals plagued by peril

A moment of silence is observed as workers at Napa State Hospital remember Donna Gross, a psych tech pictured on sign, who was killed by a patient. Nearly 200 assembled at the entrance to for safer conditions at the hospital. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

A moment of silence is observed as workers at Napa State Hospital remember Donna Gross, a psych tech pictured on sign, who was killed by a patient. Nearly 200 assembled at the entrance to for safer conditions at the hospital. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

A costly federal effort to reduce heavy drugging and improper restraining fails to improve care and help patients control violent impulses. Instead, assaults by patients mount and confinements grow longer.

By Lee Romney and John Hoeffel, Los Angeles Times

April 15, 2012

When Garth Webb was sent to Napa State Hospital, his parents were relieved.

The bellboy and amateur composer from Sebastopol had been in the throes of bipolar disorder when he was charged with threatening the lives of co-workers. His family encouraged him to plead not guilty by reason of insanity, thinking that in a mental hospital he would get the treatment he needed.

Instead, Webb and his parents say, he was repeatedly brutalized. His main tormentor, a patient in the room next door, assaulted him several times, wrapping him in a headlock and sexually abusing him.

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Soon after, the same man strangled a psychiatric worker on the hospital grounds.

“Since I’ve been here, that’s what I’ve witnessed … these random acts of violence,” Webb, now 31, said in an interview from the hospital. “It was a rude awakening.”

Webb’s ordeal offers a window on the failings of a six-year effort to improve conditions in California’s public mental hospitals at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars.

In 2006, the U.S. Department of Justice sued the state, alleging that it was violating patients’ rights by heavily drugging and improperly restraining them and failing to provide appropriate treatment. The state settled, agreeing to an extensive court-supervised improvement plan at four hospitals with more than 4,000 patients.

But a Times investigation found that the plan has failed to achieve the Justice Department’s main objective: to raise the level of care so patients could control their violent tendencies and would not be institutionalized any longer than necessary.

Under the plan, the use of restraints and certain medications declined. But by the end of last year, the rate of patient assaults on other patients and staff members had doubled at Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk and Atascadero State Hospital in San Luis Obispo County, according to an analysis of state data.

The assault rate at Napa more than tripled over two years, dropping only after the killing of the psychiatric worker triggered a lockdown.

Only at Patton State Hospital in San Bernardino did assaults decrease — by 15%.

Patients, most of whom have committed crimes linked to their illnesses, are also being confined longer, records show. Those judged not guilty by reason of insanity, for instance, were held nine months longer on average in 2011 than in 2006.

Despite the rising violence and longer periods of confinement, the Justice Department expressed overall satisfaction with the pace of improvements in the hospitals, and in November it allowed its oversight of Patton and Atascadero to expire.

But in December, the department unexpectedly asked a federal court to extend oversight of both Metropolitan and Napa, asserting in court papers that their patients remained “at serious risk of harm, even death.”

It was a huge, very expensive, very idiotic experiment that failed badly.” Dr. Mubashir Farooqi

In support of that request, a federal court monitor charged with evaluating the state’s progress cited 12 cases at the two hospitals in which patients died or were seriously injured because of lapses in care. A ruling is expected in June.

Meanwhile, the state Department of Mental Health — under new leadership — has begun dismantling many of the changes instituted at the hospitals.

“It was a huge, very expensive, very idiotic experiment that failed badly,” Dr. Mubashir Farooqi, a psychiatrist at Patton, said of the reform effort.

Complete article-

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-mental-health-htmlstory-20120415,0,7499977.htmlstory

One thought on “California State Mental Hospitals Plagued With Assaults And Rising Violence

  1. Aquote from an AA workbook for working with hospitals etc….

    Thomas Hospital in Akron, Ohio. In 1939, Rockland State Hospital,
    a New York mental institution, was the site of one of our first A.A.
    hospital groups.

    Since its beginning in 1935, the Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous has cooperated with treatment facilities. Bill W. himself was a product of a treatment facility—Towns Hospital in New York City. After he had finally put together several months of sobriety, Bill returned to Towns to try to work with other alcoholics. This was the beginning of A.A.’s Twelfth Step work in hospitals.
    After he sobered up, Dr. Bob, a surgeon, realized the need for an alcoholism ward at St. Thomas Hospital in Akron, Ohio, where he worked. With the loving assistance and dedication of Sister Ignatia, Dr. Bob established a ward for alcoholics; together, they reached over 5,000 alcoholics.

    http://www.aa.org/en_pdfs/mg-14_treatfacilcomm.pdf

    The principle of carrying the A.A. message to other alcoholics was fundamental to the recovery and continued sobriety of A.A.’s co-founders and early A.A. members.Today, through the practice of this principle—the Twelfth Step—A.A. has grown and the A.A. message has been carried around the world. A.A.s who carry the message into treatment facilities and outpatient settings continue to follow the path for sobriety laid out by A.A.’s co-founders. These A.A.s help alcoholics in treatment recover through the A.A. program and find happy, useful, sober lives.
    http://www.aa.org/pdf/products/m-40i_TFWorkbook.pdf

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