The Columbus Dispatch

Dealing with mental health crisis one Zoom call at a time

- Don Babwin

CHICAGO – The sergeant had so little use for the tablet that she did not bother to grab it from the seat of her squad car when she ran into the house where a suicidal man was screaming and slamming his head against the floor.

But when she saw the man might harm himself, his family or her officers with knives he was threatenin­g to use, she sent an officer to retrieve the tablet. She turned it on, handed it to the man and told him to talk to the woman whose face appeared on the screen. And then she watched as the man immediatel­y calmed down.

“When I saw how this tool pacified him, I was like, holy smokes, this is incredible,” said Cook County Sheriff’s Police Sgt. Bonnie Busching.

The scene marked the first time the department took the idea of the Zoom call that has become so common during the COVID-19 pandemic and inserted it into one of the most dangerous things a police officer can do: answer a domestic disturbanc­e call.

Law enforcemen­t agencies are struggling nationwide with increasing violent crime as calls mount for changing how police interact with citizens, especially those with mental health issues. Police are still most often the first called to the scene, and the sheriff’s department’s Treatment Response Team is a novel approach to managing such calls.

Started two years ago, the effort was designed to help the sheriff’s department’s 300-member police force deal with a skyrocketi­ng number of drug overdose calls during a national opioid crisis.

Then, as the pandemic left more people isolated in their homes, either unable to connect to services or unwilling to step outside and risk getting sick, the department was faced with an explosion of 911 calls linked to threats of suicide and other mental health crises.

The sheriff, who made national headlines for putting in place programs at his jail dealing with the growing number of inmates with mental health problems, now saw the same kind of issues playing out for his officers on the street.

“We were being asked more and more to be the first responders for mental health cases and they were being asked to do things they don’t have training for or minimal training for,” said Tom Dart, whose department is the second largest sheriff’s office in the nation and patrols unincorpor­ated parts of Cook County and many of its smaller communitie­s. It has seen the number of 911 calls involving mental health issues increase by nearly 60% this year.

There are other programs around the country, but most involved mental health profession­als riding around with police officers or in ambulances, Dart said.

That’s fine for smaller communitie­s but wasn’t practical for Cook County, where getting from one end to the other – without traffic – takes well over an hour.

“How many ambulances would we have to buy and how many would we have to hire to man them all?” Dart asked

Enter the tablets.

“We wanted a tool for the officers to get that mental health expert on the scene immediatel­y,” said Elli Petaquemon­tgomery, the team director.

Thus far, the department has 70 tablets – 35 purchased with grant money when the program began and 35 more when it became clear that the number of Zoom calls, which has now climbed past the 50 mark, would increase.

Also, with a program that the department is using throughout the county as well as the west side of Chicago, there have been times Zoom calls have been impossible, due to spotty service or other reasons. In nearly 20 instances, officers set up a phone call between the people in crisis and mental health profession­als.

At the same time, four clinicians and other mental health profession­als already working for the department have been joined by four more to answer calls. Dart said the price of the clinicians and the tablets – a couple hundred dollars each – is a fraction of what it would cost to send out a small army of mental health profession­als ready to hit the streets.

“We’re not asking anyone to work an 8-hour shift, but we’re just asking them to be available,” said Dart, whose office announced last week that one suburb, Oak Lawn, has joined the program. The hope is others will follow.

Still, such a program cannot work unless police officers, particular­ly those who have been around for a while and have a certain way of doing things, embrace the idea of handing over at least some control of situations to someone – and something – else.

“I don’t play video games and I wasn’t brought up in an era where you Facetime and text instead of dealing face to face,” Busching said. And she didn’t like the idea of someone on a video screen looking over her shoulder and telling her what to do.

But on that night in December, she quickly concluded she had no choice, and borrowing a famous line from a game show, told the man she was going to “phone a friend.”

“I looked at the guy and said, ‘This lady is going to help you, she’s not the police, she’s a therapist,’ ” Busching said.

Busching may be one of those not all that comfortabl­e with Zoom calls and text messages, but she quickly learned what anyone with teenage kids already knows.

“People spend a lot of time on electronic devices, they’re comfortabl­e with them and they feel safer talking face to face with a person,” said Petaque-montgomery, who was on the other end of the call.

And, she said, by handing the man the tablet, Busching signaled a level of trust.

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP ?? The Cook County (Ill.) Sheriff’s Department’s officers are hitting the streets with tablets that can connect people in distress with mental health profession­als.
NAM Y. HUH/AP The Cook County (Ill.) Sheriff’s Department’s officers are hitting the streets with tablets that can connect people in distress with mental health profession­als.

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