A special task force has delivered recommendations on improving mental health care in Minnesota and now it’s up to the governor and legislature to decide how to proceed. Law enforcement has repeatedly told lawmakers that people with mental illness end up in jail instead of getting treatment. State Human Services Assistant Commissioner Claire Wilson says one recommendation is to improve intervention. She says, “The state has mobile crisis teams that respond to a mental health crisis and can often maybe intervene before there is an episode with law enforcement.” Wilson says another recommendation is to increase the number of hospital beds available for people experiencing a mental health crisis, plus improving community response.
A better continuum of mental health care in Minnesota is another recommendation of the special task force appointed by Governor Mark Dayton. Wilson says one emphasis is prevention, by helping people in the community recognize when someone has a first episode of mental illness. She says the goal is “really having some of that awareness and prevention up front, because so much of the attention often of course is on acute episodes of mental illness, which occur when people haven’t been treated sort of upstream.” The report also recommends how to address a shortage of workers in the mental health field, plus provide more stable housing options for those with mental illness.
Here’s more info on the recommendations (news release from the Governor’s Office):
Governor’s Task Force Delivers Recommendations for Improving Mental Health Care for Minnesotans
ST. PAUL, MN – The Governor’s Task Force on Mental Health delivered recommendations to Governor Mark Dayton today for creating a statewide mental health system that meets the needs of all Minnesotans.
“I thank the Task Force members for their recommendations and their dedication to improving care for those Minnesotans with mental illness,” said Governor Dayton. “In addition to helping people in recovery, we must promote wellness and mental illness prevention. Mental health affects us all.”
More than 200,000 adults and 75,000 children in Minnesota live with mental illness. Gaps in Minnesota’s mental health system can lead to inappropriate and expensive care, such as hospitalization or ending up in a jail cell instead of a home visit from a mobile crisis team.
“Mental health affects everyone in Minnesota – not just those with diagnosed illnesses,” said Lt. Governor Tina Smith. “Too many Minnesotans lack access to the basic mental health care they need. These recommendations are an important first step to building a mental health care system that serves the needs of all Minnesotans.”
The task force took a comprehensive look at the state’s mental health system and made nine recommendations. They recognized that many people with mental illness also have a substance use disorders, and emphasized the need for a continuum of mental health services and activities, including health promotion and prevention, early intervention services, basic clinical services, residential and inpatient treatment, community supports and crisis response services. They recommended improvements to the governance of mental health services to achieve that continuum.
The task force also recognized disparities for some groups and recommended strategies to reduce those disparities. Other recommendations related to workforce and housing shortages, parity, acute care capacity and crisis response services.
Task force members included people who have experienced mental illness or their family members, mental health advocates, mental health service providers, and representatives from counties, courts, law enforcement, corrections, public health, education, housing and the Legislature. The task force held several meetings across the state between July and November 2016.
“It was a privilege to work with this diverse group of people to really dig in to the challenging issues that we face in providing a continuum of mental health services to meet people’s individual needs,” said Human Services Commissioner Emily Piper, who chaired the task force. “While there are many effective services available to help people with mental illness recover, we know there are gaps in the continuum of mental health services – some are short-term fixes and some will take many years.”
Governor’s Task Force on Mental Health Recommendations
- Creating a comprehensive mental health continuum of care
- Redesigning governance of Minnesota’s mental health system
- Using a cultural lens to reduce mental health disparities
- Developing the mental health workforce
- Achieving parity
- Promoting mental health and preventing mental illness
- Achieving housing stability
- Implementing short-term improvements to acute care capacity
- Implementing short-term solutions to improve crisis response
The full report can be found online at http://mn.gov/dhs/mental-health-tf/.
Here’s an extended interview with Assistant Commissioner Wilson: