CT Nursing Homes & Mentally Ill
Posted by Patti on February 9th, 2006 /
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I guess if they keep those with mental illness out of nursing homes it would be safer…BUT- where are they going to find placement for these people? Does the state of CT have the resources to end this practice? I hope so. I hope they don’t just fan the residents out without seriously looking at the alternatives.
HARTFORD, Conn. — More than 200 Connecticut psychiatric patients are forced to live in nursing homes, often in locked wards, when other locations would better suit them and be less costly, advocates for the mentally ill said in a lawsuit filed Monday.The federal lawsuit, brought by the state’s Office of Protection and Advocacy for Persons with Disabilities and the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, accuses Connecticut of violating the Americans with Disabilities Act and other federal laws.
Although the lawsuit focuses on patients at three Connecticut nursing facilities, OPA Executive Director James McGaughey said the implications extend far beyond those individuals and places.
“Institutionalizing people when they want to live in the community, and it is possible for them to live in the community with the proper supports, is a violation of their civil rights,” he said.
About 3,000 of the state’s approximately 27,000 nursing home residents have been diagnosed with serious mental illness, according to a draft version of a state task force report.
That report, due to be finalized and delivered to Gov. M. Jodi Rell and the General Assembly during the upcoming legislative session, estimates that several hundred of those patients could function well outside of the nursing homes _ at group homes or with family, for example _ if they receive the proper community-based services.
The practice of housing psychiatric patients at Connecticut nursing homes has gained attention in recent years, particularly after a 2003 incident in which 16 people died when a mentally ill patient started a fire at the Greenwood Health Center in Hartford. In Manchester in December 2000, a 23-year-old mentally ill man slashed an elderly resident’s throat at a nursing home because he was upset the man had taken a cookie from him.
Advocates for elderly nursing home residents have raised concerns for years about the safety of blending frail, aged residents with younger, stronger people whose mental illnesses may cause unpredictable behavior.
To address those concerns, some nursing facilities have set up separate, locked “behavioral health care” wards _ one of the issues at the crux of the new lawsuit.
State Sen. Edith Prague, a Democrat from Columbia and co-chairwoman of the legislature’s Select Committee on Aging, said Monday that neither group is well served by the current arrangement.
“What we have now is people with psychiatric problems not getting the services they need, mixed in with the elderly population that should be able to live quietly and in peace,” she said.
David Dearborn, a Rell spokesman, said the governor and legislators are concerned about providing the appropriate care to people with mental illnesses, and continue to direct funding and attention toward the issue.
















March 27th, 2006 at 3:18 am
Hi there:
Anyone have an idea of http://www.costablancaseniorservices.com?
Any good or bad experience?
Thanks,
George