Name
The Failures of Deinstitutionalization: Lessons learned & a path forward
Description
Deinstitutionalization was intended to shift individuals with severe mental illness from large state hospitals to community-based care. However, gaps in the system have led to a crisis - rising homelessness, incarceration of mentally ill individuals, overwhelmed emergency departments, and a lack of long-term care.
Content Level
Advanced
Tags
Behavioral Medicine Topics such as insomnia or medication adherence, Policy, Quality improvement programs
Session Type
Poster
SIG or Committee
Collaborative Care Model (CoCM)
Objective 1
Understand the history and intent behind deinstitutionalization, including its policy drivers.
Objective 2
Recognize the unintended consequences, including the revolving door of hospitalization, criminalization, and homelessness.
Objective 3
Explore solutions, including policy reform, integration of care, and the role of modernized state hospitals.
Content Reference 1
Farkas, M. & Coe, S. (2019). From residential care to supportive housing or people with psychiatric disabilities: Past, present, and future. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 10(862).
Content Reference 2
Pepper, B. (1987). A public policy for the long-term mentally ill: A positive alternative to reinstitutionalization. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 57(3), 452-457.
Content Reference 3
Spaulding, W.D., Sullivan, M.E., Poland, J.S., & Ritchie, A.J. (2010). State psychiatric institutions and the left-behinds of mental health reform. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 80(3), 327-333.
Content Reference 4
Vanable, J. (2021). The cost of criminalizing serious mental illness. National Alliance on Mental Health. Mar. 24, 2021.