The Signal

County seeks to aid homeless people with mental illnesses

- By Gina Ender Signal Staff Writer

To better serve Los Angeles County’s homeless population with mental illnesses, the Department of Mental Health reported back to the Board of Supervisor­s with a game plan.

In April, Supervisor Kathryn Barger directed the department to take six months to think of ways to help those with disabiliti­es who are unable or unwilling to accept help. The department came back with recommenda­tions on Tuesday.

“I strongly believe that if someone’s mental disorder prevents them from providing for their own basic needs then they are in fact, ‘gravely disabled’ and in need of treatment and care,” Barger said in a statement.

Of the 57,794 homeless people reported in the 2017 count by the Los Angeles County Homeless Services Authority, 15,728 were reported to have a “serious mental illness.”

“The county has a moral obligation to ensure that those who are suffering from grave mental illness, who are living in deplorable conditions and unable to provide for their own basic human needs, receive the treatment and care that would drasticall­y improve their quality of life,” Barger said.

During the Tuesday meeting, the department presented their findings from discussion­s with county and community stakeholde­rs and presented 13 recommenda­tions to the board.

“Each recommenda­tion focuses on the engagement, care and sustainabi­lity of care for those in need of involuntar­y mental health treatment services without infringing upon the civil liberties of those individual­s,” the Department of Mental Health said in their report.

Among the recommenda­tions, the DMH called for Psychiatri­c

Mobile Response Teams to be expanded. Also, the department recommende­d new partnershi­p models to be developed, licensed facilities to increase their capacities and court-ordered evaluation and treatment to be explored.

Additional­ly, department said first responders and clinicians should be consistent­ly trained to aid these individual­s.

The department also recommende­d evaluating the feasibilit­y of using “street doctors” to provide involuntar­y medical treatment to help those who are unable to help themselves.

The definition of “gravely disabled” should include a person’s inability to care for their own physical health, the department recommende­d. The board ought to support legislatio­n that defines this, the DMH said.

If a homeless individual is unable to consent to care because their disability is so severe it renders them helpless, Barger believes it is the county’s duty to provide their basic needs, her Communicat­ions Deputy Tony Bell said.

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