New York Post

City defends treatment trea of mentally me ill

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Following Followi the deadly police shooting of Saheed Sah Vassell, the city claimed on Friday to thoroughly treat emotionall­y disturbed distu people who get taken into custody custo for acting out in public.

State law la allows an emotionall­y disturbed person, pe or EDP, to be held for up to 72 hours, then locked up in a psychiatri­c psychiatr ward on the advice of two examining examinin physicians for as many as 60 days before discharge or transfer tr to a mental hospital.

NYC Health + Hospitals, which runs the city’s public hospitals, said that when it discharges mental patients, they get meds and follow-up appointmen­ts. a

If a high-risk patient fails to show, s a mobile crisis unit hits the t streets to bring him or her in, in Health + Hospitals said.

The city Department of Health H and Mental Hygiene said sa that since Mayor de Blasio took too office, there has been a 23 percent increase in mandatory outpatient tr treatment under Kendra’s Law, with 2,479 2,47 cases last year.

The state sta law allows courts to order dangerous dangerou patients into monitored treatment. treatmen It is named for Kendra Webdale, who was fatally pushed in front of a Manhattan subway train by a former mental m patient in 1999.

NYPD union leaders accused the city of failing fai to treat mentally ill people and leaving le cops to deal with them.

“Why do they not send mentalheal­th profession­als pr to deal with those requiring assistance prior to the police li having h i to be called?” said Ed Mullins, president of the Sergeants Benevolent Associatio­n.

“If we are going to lay blame, then it clearly lies with the mayor, the mentalheal­th profession­als and those charged with handling people in need.”

Patrolmen’s Benevolent Associatio­n President Patrick Lynch said: “Those who suffer the pains of mental illness and who need government support the most have been let down. Sadly, it is the police who are called to deal with a problem that society has ignored.”

Vassell, 34, underwent hospital treatment as an EDP at least twice in response to 911 calls, police sources say.

The first hospitaliz­ation came in 2008 after he ran through traffic in his underwear and lay in the street, pounding his head on the pavement and eating rocks.

Then, in 2011, Vassell was taken to a hospital after his mom said he had stopped taking his medication and had become irrational and violent.

It was unclear what hospital or hospitals he was taken to or if he was admitted for treatment. Yoav Gonen, Shawn Cohen and Bruce Golding

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