My Turn: Mental health patients have rights

  • By BY FAITH MYERS AND DORRANCE COLLINS
  • Monday, February 27, 2017 9:00pm
  • Opinion

In the state’s ongoing effort to manage the rising costs of treating the disabled, it is the disabled who pay the price. In too many cases, there is no state standard of care for the disabled, even in regulations; when the state wants to save money, the first and easiest place is to encourage private facilities to reduce the quality of care and treatment for disabled psychiatric patients.

In a recent letter to the Legislature, the commissioner of the Department of Health and Social Services, Valerie Davidson wrote, “A blended approach to privatization is in the best interest to Alaska Psychiatric Institute and the state.”

In our opinion, the commissioner’s plan would not be in the best interest of patients because the state has a history of only looking at cutting costs and not promoting quality of patient care.

Labor costs for staff in a psychiatric hospital have dramatically increased over the last 20 years over and above inflation. In the same time period, floor space in acute care facilities for patients has decreased. The amount of time and treatment available to acute care patients has decreased. Rights given to acute care patients have not kept pace with best practice.

Last year 4,500 individuals were evaluated at Providence Hospital’s Psychiatric ER — average 12 a day. That number is up from several years ago when it was 10 a day. Add to that number, half a dozen other acute care private psychiatric units around the state.

State attorney, Kate S. Glover, on Jan. 26, 2015 stated, “There is an argument that this statute (AS47.30.660 (b) (13) creates an unconstitutional delegation of executive branch functions to nongovernmental and regulated entities. The delegation provides no specific standard…”

In layman’s terms, the state is turning disabled psychiatric patients over to private facilities with not enough specific standards of care, all in the effort to save money.

In the state’s plan of treating acute-care psychiatric patients, key statistics are left out. The number of patients that suffer from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder because of poor hospital treatment or transportation, recidivism, and the damage done because of incomplete treatment.

The state of Alaska has to become a partner with individuals needing psychiatric treatment. That can only happen if patients have the rights that let them sit at the table as equal partners.


Faith Myers and Dorrance Collins are mental health advocates who live in Anchorage.


More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

Here’s how to add your voice to the conversation.

Alaska Senate Majority Leader Gary Stevens, prime sponsor of a civics education bill that passed the Senate last year. (Photo courtesy Alaska Senate Majority Press Office)
Opinion: A return to civility today to lieu of passing a flamed out torch

It’s almost been a year since the state Senate unanimously passed a… Continue reading

Eric Cordingley looks at his records while searching for the graves of those who died at Morningside Hospital at Multnomah Park Cemetery on Wednesday, March 13, 2024, in Portland, Ore. Cordingley has volunteered at his neighborhood cemetery for about 15 years. He’s done everything from cleaning headstones to trying to decipher obscure burial records. He has documented Portland burial sites — Multnomah Park and Greenwood Hills cemeteries — have the most Lost Alaskans, and obtained about 1,200 death certificates. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)
My Turn: Decades of Psychiatric patient mistreatment deserves a state investigation and report

On March 29, Mark Thiessen’s story for the Associated Press was picked… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Alaska House makes the right decision on constitutionally guaranteed PFD

The Permanent Fund dividend is important to a lot of Alaska households,… Continue reading

Alaska Attorney General Treg Taylor in a profile picture at the Department of Law’s website. (Alaska Department of Law photo)
Dunleavy wants a state sponsored legal defense fund

On Friday, the Senate Judiciary Committee held its second hearing on a… Continue reading

Juneau School District administrators and board members listen to a presentation about the district’s multi-million deficit during a Jan. 9 meeting. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: The twisted logic of the Juneau School Board recall petition

The ink was hardly dry on the Juneau School District (JSD) FY… Continue reading

A crowd overflows the library at Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé on Feb. 22 as school board members meet to consider proposals to address the Juneau School District’s budget crisis. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: The last thing Juneau needs now is a divisive school board recall campaign

The long-postponed and necessary closure and consolidation of Juneau schools had to… Continue reading

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, delivers her annual address to the Alaska Legislature on Feb. 15 as Senate President Gary Stevens and House Speaker Cathy Tilton watch. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Sen. Lisa Murkowski has a job to finish

A few weeks ago, Sen. Lisa Murkowski told CNN’s Manu Raju she… Continue reading