The Palm Beach Post

Trump White House must address mental health, drug addiction

- BRAD JAFFE, WEST PALM BEACH Editor’s note: Brad Jaffe is president of Family Relations Interventi­on LLC in West Palm Beach.

To President-elect Donald J. Trump: You have been elected as the outsider and someone who is expected to “drain the swamp.” You were elected because of your direct and unconventi­onal ideas that alter the national discussion on many issues. You, along with the U.S. Senate and the House of Representa­tives, have an opportunit­y to address and ultimately reform two major issues that have been swept under the rug and received little to no attention during the presidenti­al election — mental health care and the heroin and opioid epidemic ravaging our communitie­s.

As a mental health profession­al who works with drug addicts, I have seen the failures of the current system. Too many addicts are cut off from adequate, long-term care. Insurance companies are dictating treatment and not providing the necessary coverage for those in residentia­l drug treatment programs.

While the insurance companies are deciding the length of care, our pharmaceut­ical companies are pumping pain pills out at an unimaginab­le rate, leading doctors to overprescr­ibe highly addictive pills that are expensive and lead many individual­s to find a cheaper source of pain relief: heroin.

Additional­ly, mental health care in this country is deplorable. Community mental health centers are poorly run, understaff­ed and driven by managed care. The Veterans Administra­tion is a mess, as countless veterans wait for mental health care and benefits. Here are a few proposals that will address the issues: ■ Rein in pharmaceut­ical companies’ ability to continue oversellin­g pain medication­s, particular­ly opioids, and lay out a 5-to-10-year plan where pain management doctors must find alternate treatments.

■ The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services should track the amount of pain pills doctors prescribe to a patient and ensure overmedica­ting patients is not happening.

■ Label fentanyl a Class A or B drug. This highly addictive drug is being used by heroin addicts and is 100 times stronger than heroin. If police catch someone with fentanyl, they cannot do anything. Empower local authoritie­s to rid the drug from our communitie­s.

■ Cut the red tape at the Veterans Administra­tion, and allow vets to access private mental health clinics and providers.

I hope you act boldly.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States