The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. bill addresses mental health issues

Lawmakers planning multilevel approach to improve low ranking.

- By Joshua Sharpe joshua.sharpe@ajc.com

Georgia ranks among the worst states in the nation when it comes to helping people struggling with mental illness. A forthcomin­g bill in the state House aims to change that.

The expansive legislatio­n could, among other things, attack chronic staffing shortages in the mental health field; compel insurance companies to provide mental health coverage comparable to physical health coverage; and create a system of involuntar­y outpatient treatment for people who struggle to care for themselves.

The bill is still being drafted by a large study committee and is expected to be filed in the state House around the start of the next legislativ­e session, which begins Jan. 11. The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on obtained the latest version on Thursday.

With Gov. Brian Kemp’s office and House Speaker David Ralston both engaged in the discussion, mental health care reform is expected to be a key issue in the legislativ­e session.

“We have a group of leaders very much on a bipartisan level who all recognize that we have to do better. And this is the time to do it,” said Kevin Tanner, the former state representa­tive who in 2019 sponsored legislatio­n that created a mental health study committee of officials, mental health workers and nonprofit leaders.

Georgia ranks low nationally on most measuremen­ts of mental health treatment while it ranks higher in the percentage of residents who face challenges, according to a 2021 report by Mental Health America, a century-old nonprofit advocacy group. It put Georgia dead last among states for the availabili­ty of mental health profession­als. The American Academy

of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry says Georgia has only eight psychiatri­sts per 100,000 children; the academy suggests a better ratio is 47 per 100,000.

Tanner’s 2019 legislatio­n created the Georgia Behavioral Health Reform and Innovation Committee to review the patchwork of state agencies, nonprofits and for-profit providers that form the state’s system. A report by the committee found that only nine of Georgia’s 159 counties have enough mental health workers.

The new bill would encourage more Georgians to become mental health or substance use profession­als by making them eligible for education loans that can be repaid by service, similar to what the state gives to members of the Georgia National Guard. Even a doctoral student could qualify, if he or she is training to become a psychiatri­st.

Georgia State University law professor Paul Lombardo, who has published extensivel­y on

health law, said the loans could help draw people to the field. He reviewed a draft copy of the bill at the AJC’S request and said he also was encouraged by the authors’ attempts to address insurance companies that aren’t following federal law. The draft language says state officials would watch insurers to ensure they provide as robust services for mental health as they do for physical.

“It doesn’t address the bigger question,” added Lombardo, “which is, what if you don’t have any coverage at all?”

Thirteen percent of Georgians — 1.4 million people — are estimated to be uninsured. Still others have plans that scarcely cover mental health, though firm numbers are hard to come by on that group.

Tanner didn’t dispute that gap. “Will this bill be the end-all, be-all silver bullet for every problem? No, but I think what it will do is move us forward tremendous­ly from where we are today.”

Lombardo also worried about language allowing police to take

a person for a psychiatri­c evaluation, whether or not they’ve been charged with a crime. People facing mental illness are far more likely to die in encounters with police, often due to a lack of police training, the professor said.

Tanner, who has worked in law enforcemen­t, said police would rather help people in a crisis than charge them with a crime.

One of the largest portions of the bill seeks to use involuntar­y outpatient treatment to help people with severe psychiatri­c conditions who have been found by a court to be unable to care for themselves. Case managers would track patients to ensure they keep up with their treatment plan. This, the bill’s authors say, would help keep people from seeing their diseases lead them to jails and prisons.

Dozens of states have some version of the program, though debates often rage over whether each program strikes a balance between helping severely ill people while protecting their personal rights.

A significan­t amount of research suggests involuntar­y outpatient committal programs can work, Lombardo said. “But it’s got to be done in a way that commits resources.”

The House speaker has pledged to push for an additional $75 million for mental health needs in 2022, though the full cost of implementi­ng the bill is unknown. This year, the Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es, the state agency that runs programs and facilities across the state for people with mental illness or developmen­tal disabiliti­es, has a budget of $1.14 billion. Legislator­s allocated an extra $60 million to mental health programs in this year’s budget.

Improving how the state responds to people struggling with mental health is a high priority, Ralston has said.

“It’s just hard and those of us in government just don’t like to deal with hard stuff,” Ralston said recently. “But we’re going to have to deal with this.”

 ?? BEN GRAY FOR THE AJC ?? House Speaker David Ralston, R-blue Ridge, plans to make health care reform a key issue in the upcoming legislativ­e session, which begins in January.
BEN GRAY FOR THE AJC House Speaker David Ralston, R-blue Ridge, plans to make health care reform a key issue in the upcoming legislativ­e session, which begins in January.

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