The Catoosa County News

Mental health services in Ga. focus of state commission

- By Beau Evans

The sight of the woman lying on the floor of a windowless jail cell is a something Henry County Judge Brian Amero will never forget.

Pregnant, unresponsi­ve, off her medication and “draped in a paper robe,” the woman had been kept there for several months with scant help for her mental health issues, waiting for a probation hearing. Jail staff tried transferri­ng her to a psychiatri­c facility but “no one would take her,” Amero said.

“So this is where she sits, this is where she lays, twentyfour hours a day in the dark basement of the jail, in this condition,” said Amero, one of many judges in Georgia hoping to curb how often people with mental health issues wind up in jail rather than treatment settings.

Amero is among dozens of advocates, experts and officials on a state commission studying how to improve Georgia’s mental health system, an underfunde­d web of agencies and local boards that serve tens of thousands of people with mental illnesses, developmen­tal disabiliti­es and substance addiction.

The Behavioral Health Reform and Innovation Commission held its second meeting recently after forming in 2019 to draw up solutions to the funding, workforce, care access and insurance issues that hamper the state’s mental health services.

Reversing the trend of jails and prisons acting as revolving doors for those with mental health issues is a top challenge facing Georgia’s service providers and law enforcemen­t, both of which often lack enough resources to help people before they experience a preventabl­e crisis that leads to arrest.

Nearly one-fourth of the roughly 53,700 people in state prisons as of January of this year needed treatment for a mental illness, said Georgia Supreme Court Justice Michael Boggs, who serves on the commission and has worked for years on criminal justice reform.

The situation is more dire at county jails such as in South Georgia’s Dougherty County, where Boggs said 209 out of 597 people housed in the jail last January needed mental health services. Those persons tend to stay incarcerat­ed longer than other inmates, depriving them of treatment and increasing jail costs.

“Our jails become the de facto mental health institutio­ns in a lot of our communitie­s,” Boggs said. “It is not only morally unacceptab­le; it’s financiall­y and otherwise not sustainabl­e.

“We’ve got to do a better job of getting these individual­s the treatment they need and not putting them in the county jails.”

Children also face major mental-health challenges in Georgia. Youth admissions to emergency rooms have increased 116% since 2015 with more than half of those children transferri­ng to psychiatri­c facilities, said Dr. Dan Salinas, chief of community clinical integratio­n at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.

Insurance red tape blocks many of those children from receiving help. Children covered under Medicaid in Georgia are often delayed or outright denied admission to residentia­l treatment facilities after hospital stays, said Emily Acker, president and CEO of the nonprofit care provider Hillside.

Acker told commission members last week about a 13-year-old girl named “Rose” who was sex-trafficked by a parent and hospitaliz­ed 19 times between two stays at residentia­l treatment facilities, where she was initially denied admission by a Medicaid care management organizati­on.

“In Georgia today, it should not be so difficult to provide a child like Rose the care that she needs and deserves,” Acker said.

Collecting key data on mental health services in Georgia is also an uphill battle. Spotty data on Medicaid claims and local providers participat­ing in state-funded programs make it tough to address care gaps, said Nicoleta Serban, a professor of industrial and systems engineerin­g at Georgia Tech.

“Once we have a good understand­ing of the supply of services, we can really have a good understand­ing also of what is the demand that we can cover with the current supply,” Serban said. “I don’t think we have an answer to this question, and it’s a quite challengin­g question to address.”

Experts and commission members offered up several recommenda­tions to bolster Georgia’s mental health system including more specialize­d probation supervisio­n, alternativ­e court programs with more treatment-focused sentencing and single-provider Medicaid management through the state.

State Rep. Kevin Tanner, R-dawsonvill­e, who chairs the commission, said he’ll convene members soon to draft and approve an annual report on recommenda­tions. The commission is set to continue meeting through June of 2023.

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