The Jerusalem Post

Mental health service transfer to HMOS still being stymied

- • By JUDY SIEGEL

The state, on behalf of the Health Ministry, has been instructed by the High Court of Justice to explain within six weeks why it has not yet transferre­d responsibi­lity for psychiatri­c services from the ministry to the four public health funds.

The proposed reform goes back to 1997, and Deputy Health Minister Ya’acov Litzman changed his previous position to favor it in the spring of 2010.

The case was brought to the court by voluntary organizati­ons Bizchut and Otzma, which demanded immediate implementa­tion of the reform, but the justices did not favor this. The ministry said it “is seriously considerin­g the reform but has not yet decided.”

The lack of adequate public facilities in the community, manpower and funding for treating psychiatri­c patients and rehabilita­ting them causes their progress to lag behind and suffer, the organizati­ons said.

The Supreme Court issued an order in 2005 for the ministry to carry out the reform. Litzman, who had been opposed to transferri­ng responsibi­lity to the health funds when he was Knesset Finance Committee chairman, changed his position some 19 months ago. But no progress has been made on the ground.

Some 250,000 patients, the organizati­ons said, demand change now. NIS 400 million to NIS 500m. needs to be added to the budget to implement the reform, and the Treasury has not yet agreed to allocate it.

The organizati­ons also blamed MK Haim Katz, chairman of the Knesset Labor, Welfare and Heath Committee, and Litzman for the delays. Labor Party chairwoman MK Shelly Yacimovich has also opposed the reform, saying it was “dangerous privatizat­ion,” even though most mental health profession­als – except a group of psychologi­sts – are in favor.

The Health Ministry said it was “investing great efforts in advancing the reform,” which is “very important and sensitive.” Litzman will work to implement it “by legislatio­n, which we have started, or by other means.” The ministry failed to comment on reports that it will carry out the reform through regulation­s instead of legislatio­n.

Litzman said at the 2010 Dead Sea Conference: “It is no secret that previously I opposed it strongly. I won’t hide it. I still have doubts. But what has existed so far is not good.”

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