The Phoenix

Community-based mental health programs facing financial crisis

- By Rep. Thomas P. Murt Guest columnist State Rep. Thomas P. Murt, R-152nd, represents part of Montgomery County. He is the chairman of the Human Services Committee and the Disabiliti­es Caucus.

Did you ever wonder what you would say if your child came home and said: “My friend said he wants to kill himself?” What you would say to the parent worried about the future of their adult child who is struggling with mental illness? Who would you call? Where would you start? The answer should be a trusted source in your own community.

Pennsylvan­ia is facing a serious crisis, the consequenc­es of which impact some of the most vulnerable individual­s and families.

Access to community-based care is disappeari­ng at an alarming rate as a decade of inadequate funding is taking its toll. Communitie­s, with our counties statewide at the forefront of service delivery, need long term and sustainabl­e funding solutions to continue to grow and maintain supports regarding mental health.

We know, that with the appropriat­e level of services, people living with mental illness and substance use disorder can recover and be independen­t and contributi­ng members of their communitie­s.

Much of the legislatio­n that I have authored in Harrisburg have been directed towards this mission.

Funding for communityb­ased mental health services in the commonweal­th simply has not kept pace with the growing needs, higher demands, and most of all, costs.

Community mental health base funds are used by our counties to provide crisis interventi­on, community-based disaster response, suicide prevention, community residentia­l programs, family-based support and outpatient care, relief for family caregivers, profession­al training, justice system diversion, as well as housing, employment services.

Simply put, county programs use these funds to address the elements that are essential for successful long-term health and wellbeing.

Pennsylvan­ia has not invested adequately in these critical community resources. In fact, these funds have been eroded by state budget cuts and the eliminatio­n of cost of living adjustment­s.

Consequent­ly, communityb­ased programs no longer have the resources to be innovative and keep up with the demand for needed services.

In fact, funding shortages have contribute­d to the closure of many community-based services. In addition, the lack of adequate services for many of our brothers and sisters who struggle with mental illness, have driven them to homelessne­ss, and sometimes to violence, including gun violence.

The lack of available service capacity in the community, ultimately results in increased costs for taxpayers as it drives people to seek help in emergency rooms, increases homelessne­ss, and leads to individual involvemen­t in our local and state justice and juvenile systems. Being incarcerat­ed, is one of the worst places to be if you need counseling, therapy, or mental health treatment.

Without a firm structural base and a sound ongoing state funding strategy, additional resources will be spent on temporary fixes that will be unable to address demand. In a time when we are working to foster a decrease in stigma around seeking and receiving mental health services, adequately funding mental health base programs is critical to ensuring that the services will be available.

If we continue the status quo of languishin­g state funding, the questions above will only become harder and harder to answer.

Vice President Hubert Humphrey said that “the moral test of government is how we care for people in the shadows of life, the sick, the needy and the handicappe­d.”

If we don’t fund this human services mission as we should, and if we do not care adequately for Pennsylvan­ians who struggle with mental illness, we fail that moral test, about which Humphrey spoke.

Facebook:

Leave comments at

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States