Crisis Care: Letters to the Editor about mental health care in Sonoma County
A sampling of reader response to The Press Democrat's "Crisis Care" series examining the mental health system in Sonoma County:
Thankful for story
EDITOR: As the father of a young adult child with significant psychiatric and developmental issues, I can only stand up and applaud the incredible cover story in Sunday's Press Democrat regarding local efforts to cope with the burgeoning mental health care crisis ('Crisis care: ERs take brunt in psychiatric shortfall,' Aug. 6). The overall result is a comprehensive look, from both a practical and personal perspective, at a problem that is as complex as it is acute.
My daughter has been in the Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital emergency room several times, as well as stays at Behavioral Health facilities. Considering the article's depth, I can only add my voice from a lifelong journey with her beginning in Los Angeles 25 years ago.
While the strain on emergency rooms and service sectors is the tipping point, I would add that the people performing those services — nurses, case managers, service coordinators and doctors — are more dedicated and capable than any I have ever encountered. These professionals are as much in need of our collective support as the clients they care for.
It is also important to recognize Sonoma County Supervisor Shirlee Zane for the leadership role she has shouldered in pressing the case for adequate mental health care at a legislative level. This issue speaks to the heart of who we are as a community.
— JOHN BRODEY, Santa Rosa
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Major health crisis
EDITOR: I often write to thank your newspaper for your consistent coverage of the homelessness crisis and mental health issues. But after your Sunday pieces on the severe state of affairs with mental health care in Sonoma County, I must extend a special thanks. These articles — which profile the complicated legal status of opening and maintaining psychiatric hospitals accepting low-income people and which also show in stark statistics how our jails are filled with the mentally ill as psychiatric units and community mental health supportive units dwindle — hit home.
They highlight a major public health emergency in this county — and in the United States, as well.
What's needed is more openness about these issues as well as advocacy, public policy and funding that supports more housing and more health care. Your focused and consistent coverage contributes greatly to this cause.
Some may not think these issues concern them, but 20 percent of Americans suffer from mental illness, and severe psychiatric crises impact hospital emergency rooms and the safety of other people.
Of course there are the moral and ethical failures in letting these severely ill people decline — sometimes fatally — right in front of us.
— IRENE BARNARD, Santa Rosa
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Mental health solutions
EDITOR: Thank you for highlighting the many creative solutions that Sonoma County Behavioral Health is implementing in collaboration with its community partners to address the needs of residents living with serious mental illness.
Buckelew Programs is fortunate to be a key partner in these efforts. We have contracted with Sonoma County Behavioral Health since 1999 to offer housing, job training and mental health rehabilitation services, including specialized supports for transition-age youth, those referred through the criminal justice system and the chronically homeless.
With critical funding from the Mental Health Services Act (Proposition 63), the county was able to expand our services to develop the innovative Family Service Coordination Program. For the past 10 years, these free services have helped thousands of Sonoma County families navigate the often complex health system, learn about mental illness and how to be there for their loved ones while building their own resilience and support network.
While there's still much to be done, we are grateful to be part of the solution by empowering people with behavioral health challenges, assisting those who love them and strengthening our community in the process.
— TAMARA PLAYER, CEO, Buckelew Programs
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Mental health coverage
EDITOR: Thanks for your stellar coverage of the state of mental health care in Sonoma County. I appreciate your newspaper's continued focus on the intractable and complicated issues of poverty, homelessness and mental illness.
I especially valued your first-person accounts from people with mental health issues and family members as well ('Families, patients share stories,' Aug. 27). These people are brave for speaking from the heart about their struggles with these diseases — made all the more devastating by the lack of services and sufficient health care facilities and resources here. I grew up with a mother who had schizoaffective disorder and know that feeling alone and stigmatized, as well as having little knowledge about mental illness or available resources, made our experience tough to survive.
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