Showing posts with label treatment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label treatment. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

deinstitutionalization

Let me start by saying that I realize I'm touching on a controversial subject.  I'm going to talk about it anyway.  

A few nights ago I was at a meeting about disability rights legislation.  Yay advocacy and policy development!  Anyway, at the end, for the "check out" (gotta love meetings run by social workers...) we had to share a barrier we thought was faced by the disabled community or that we were currently facing.  I talked about lack of adequate access to mental health care, some people talked about attitudes, others about accessability and employment, all the normal things.  What surprised me, was the number of people who talked about institutionalization and how important it was that we continue with deinstitutionalization.  

I'm not sure why it surprised me.  It's not exactly an unfamiliar concept for me, and for that matter it is something our government is currently working on.  Our newest Assertive Community Treatment team was set up to take referrals only from the long term mental health care facility, at least in it's initial stages.  In otherwords, it was designed to be intensive support for deinsitutionalization.  

The thing is, in my experience, institutionalization, in some way, is necessary, until we come up with better options for psychiatric treatment.  I spent eight months doing practicum in Assertive Community Treatment, the most intensive form of community mental health care my province has to offer.  The clients have a team of professionals and twenty four hour on call support.  They have daily contact, sometimes twice daily, observed meds and assistance with just about anything you could need assistance with.  Unfortunately, even with this very intensive level of support it was necessary to make two referrals to the long term care facility during my eight months.  Of course during that time we had many success stories as well.  

See the thing is, despite everything the team was doing, these clients simply could not be maintained in the community.  One woman was living in a rodent infested house with rotting floors, sleeping in a urine soaked bed, the house was in and out with drug dealers and the dirt was incredible.  She absolutely refused to take meds or to move.  Eventually the police had to remove her from the home and the public trustee made the decision to stop paying her rent.  The last time I saw her, she was doing okay in hospital, but certainly not well enough to live out again.  Another was so mentally ill and so drug addicted she jumped off a bridge, thankfully not too high up.  The courts didn't know what to do with her many crimminal charges and once release from jail or hospital she'd disappear for days at a time without taking her meds.  Because of her spinal injuries, she was referred to long term for her own safety.  

And then there are the forensic patients.  We have a special locked ward for them.  And seriously, I've been on the "worst" ward in the long term care facility.  The patients there are very, very mentally ill.  They are affected in ways that I cannot even begin to imagine.  Maybe with time, and patience and new treatments something will change, but until then... where will they go if their insitution is shut down?  

Finally there are the geriatric patients.  I've got news for you, schizophrenia doesn't end with middle adult hood, brain injuries don't magically heal.  And while we do have specialized homecare services, some clients just need more then that.  

So, i do agree with deinsitutionalization.  I want to be very clear about that.  I also don't agree with the institutions of the past, however, I want to make it very clear that there is a time and place in which long term psychiatric care facilities are necessary, and I don't think closing them all, especially without replacing them, will do the community a whole lot of good. 

Friday, January 30, 2009

Leaving the Shelter


I really want to be sarcastic about this picture.  I really, really do, but I'm not going to be, because finding a picture of "empowerment" is hard.  It really is.  

I mentioned earlier that the enforcer and I got in a fight, it was about empowerment, although that word never came up.  See, we have this problem at our "emergency" shelter - some people have slept there for years.  This causes us to turn away the people in need who are having a more isolated emergency and makes me feel like we're just warehousing.  

The way I see things, the situation sucks and we need to do something to empower people to find other options for their lives.  The way the enforcer sees it, we need to kick their butts out the door into housing and forget what they want.  I only wish I was exaggerating.  He actually said that they'll come back later, thank us, and tell us that they wish we'd done it years ago.  Now, while this may be the case, maybe, it does not change the fact that people are their own individual people and I don't think we have the right to decide things for them...except that I do, and I don't.  

It's sort of like this.  It frustrates me that there are people who live in the shelter day in and day out, it frustrates me that this is their life and I feel like we're doing nothing.  However, I'm not quite sure what we should be doing.  I initially thought of a time limit to shelter stays (ie 3 months) but then what do we do, turn the chronically homeless away?  I sometimes think it does take a kick in the butt to get people moving, but will it change anything?  Many people who do find housing get evicted very quickly and wind up back in the shelter by the end of the month.  

There's this new school of thought though called "housing first".  The point of this is to get people into safe housing and then work with them on all the other stuff (addiction, mental illness, disability, life skills etc...) and it apparently has really good results, and I agree.  I think for quite a few of my clients if they were housed other aspects of their life would begin to change as well.  

But, because there's always a but, it's not so easy living on your own after having been in the shelter along time, especially if you grew up in foster care, group homes, residential school etc... many people do not have some of the basic life skills that the majority of us take for granted.  For example, my house is messy, but I do know how to clean it.  I know which cleaning products to use, what all needs doing etc...  I know as well how to boil water, how to read the directions on a recipe and how deal with my caretaker and landlord.  

I'm definitely going to write more about this, my eyelids are sinking lower and lower right now and I'm rambling so I'm ending this entry, but there will be more.  

Could some of my clients really make it on their own?  


Thursday, May 8, 2008