"I'm listening. I hear you."
Hope you have a good weekend everybody!
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Photo credit: Sharon Lefkov
"I'm listening. I hear you."
Hope you have a good weekend everybody!
This is really happening! This is my son's new group home in Gilbert, Arizona. We just arrived for intake. This company does not charge the client room and board. They provide 3 meals and 3 snacks a day and they provide laundry soap. All expenses are covered through Ryan's insurance (state funded insurance). The other group home, in a crime and drug invested area, required 70% of a client's income.
This housing is not permanent long term. We will have staff meetings every 30 days and placement will be reviewed every 45 days. I was told that Ryan can stay as long as he needs to. A step down to a lower level of care is the eventual goal.
I prayed for this. I'm very grateful this opportunity opened up and wish there were more programs like this to meet the needs of the SMI population.
This home is run by Arizona Behavioral Care. Ten men share the home which is currently at capacity. www.azbehavioralcare.com
Sherry and Mitchel
I wasn't going to share this, but I feel like people need to realize our mental health system is seriously flawed.
Two weeks ago, my son, Mitchel, was admitted to Utah Valley Medical Regional Center's psychiatric unit. He's been experiencing full blown psychosis. The hospital had his records and knew his circumstances and history. They knew he was a threat to himself and others.
Instead of putting him with a one-on-one or even in isolation, they left him with other patients and staff members. In his psychosis, he assaulted an employee. The hospital called the police and had Mitchel arrested. He spent almost a week in jail psychotic and without care. The charges were dropped.
We took Mitchel to the ER in hopes to find placement (another facility that would be willing to take him on). No one wanted to treat him because he had neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) in January. (NMS is a life-threatening reaction that occasionally occurs in response to neuroleptic or antipsychotic medication.) Now, Mitchel's unable to take anti-psych medications due to the NMS.
Finally, Provo Canyon Behavioral Hospital decided they would take him. During his time there, the therapist and doctor called me a half dozen times looking for ways they could treat my son. I mean, who are the professionals here? I gave them history on what had worked in the past. Usually, when Mitchel's in full-blown psychosis, the only thing that works is keeping him away from others. Not that I wanted him to be put away in a room but, in order to keep others safe, I recommended that he be isolated.
Yesterday, the director of the local mental health facility, that regularly treats my son, called me. He said Provo Canyon Behavioral Hospital had Mitchel arrested due to a few incidents that had occurred. WTF? When a psychiatric hospital cannot treat a person with psychosis you know there is a problem with the mental health system. It's not just flawed. It's criminal.
Now, we wait to find out about Mitchel's new court date. Hopefully, the prosecutor will dismiss the charges and, this time, I have his doctor, from the state hospital, ready to admit him to the state hospital — again.
I'm crossing fingers the charges will be dropped or this could be a long, drawn out, debilitating process for my very sick son. He's sick. Nothing more. Nothing less. I'm furious at our mental health system for failing to help Mitchel and for dumping him into the prison system.
Mitchel in the ER
See other posts from Sherry Hunter about Mitchel on this blog:
October 19, 2016
November 30, 2016
March 28, 2017 (video)
June 21, 2017
Photo Credit: Paco_MUC/Flickr
From my friend, Sheila Ganz:
I am excited to share with you the new trailer for the documentary-in-progress Piece of Mind: www.pieceofmindfilm.com. This emotionally compelling film explores the impact of serious mental illness on two families and a man living with bipolar disorder interwoven with insights from an emergency room psychiatrist and visually intimate artwork. Our goal is to finish the film in 2018. I hope you will take 3 ½ minutes to watch the trailer. If you are moved by the stories please make a tax-deductible donation in any amount now: https://www.sffilm.org/artist-…/find-a-project/piece-of-mind. Post card gifts for donors. With a $100 donation your name will be in the credits of the film. Like the film’s Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pieceofmindfilm/ Thank you!
Piece of Mind – A documentary work-in-progress by Sheila Ganz
The feature documentary PIECE OF MIND is an emotionally compelling story about the impact of serious mental illness on two families and a man living with bipolar disorder interwoven with insights from an emergency room psychiatrist and visually intimate artwork. The film explores gut-wrenching experiences of a son in denial about paranoid schizophrenia, a sister shot by police and her lawsuit invoking the Americans With Disabilities Act, contrasted with a man’s attempted suicide, which leads to a positive encounter with police officers, taking medication and the desire to help others. PIECE OF MIND seeks solutions for this deeply personal public health crisis.
DONATE
If you are moved by the trailer, please make a tax-deductible donation in any amount now to support completion of PIECE OF MIND in 2018. Information to send a check here. Post card gifts to our donors of the artwork in the film by Sheila Ganz – “Fear of Germs” and “Spray Bleach.”
$50 donation – 1 post card of your choice
$100 donation – 1 post card of your choice and your name in the credits of the film, or someone you designate.
$150 donation - both post cards and your name in the credits of the film, or someone you designate.
$200 donation – 4 post cards and your name in the credits of the film, or someone you designate.
Send an email to sheila.ganz@gmail.com with your choice of post card(s) after you make a donation. Thank you! All donors will receive a Thank You letter from the filmmaker.
Today, an estimated 44 million adults in America live with a mental illness, yet nearly 60% don’t receive treatment in a given year. What these numbers don’t take into account is the toll it takes on parents, siblings and children, as they struggle to keep their family intact and get their loved one treatment in a broken mental health care system. PIECE OF MIND explores solutions to care for individuals living with serious mental illness including increased funding for more beds and staff for psychiatric facilities, wider implementation of Laura’s Law and Kendra’s Law, and the importance of de-escalation training for police officers nationwide.
Making PIECE OF MIND comes out of Sheila Ganz’s personal experience. Her sister lives with schizophrenia. The agonizing powerlessness Sheila felt over her sister’s need for treatment drove her to support groups at National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) San Francisco, where she heard many different stories of family members with loved ones living with serious mental illness. “This issue was staring me in the face. I knew I had to make the film.”
Leah was born September 13, 1986. She was a miracle baby. I'd already given birth to three daughters and had my tubes snipped after the third. Later, my husband and I decided to reverse my operation. After one tubal pregnancy and a miscarriage, Leah arrived.
Leah's 31st birthday
Leah had three teenage sisters to love and help care for her. Life was good. I gave Leah many advantages — private pre-school, pre-k, and kindergarten. She struggled in math and reading, so I hired a private tutor. Her grades in math brought up the suggestion to have her evaluated for possible ADHD, but her father refused to let this happen. We divorced after her fifth school year.
In high school, Leah did okay. She loved music, took private lessons in voice, and performed with a music group. After high school, Leah attended community college, and worked at a super market. During her second year of college, things began to unravel. Her first relationship ended, she dropped her classes, and quit her job. She stayed at home and started talking to herself. She called her voices the " people who live in my head."
Even though I'd gone back to school and received a degree in Paraprofessional/Special Education, I didn't see the warning signs. I asked Leah to see a doctor with no success. When she finally begged to see a doctor herself, I took her to a hospital emergency room only to be told there were no beds. This was in Washington State. The ER staff handed me some valium and antidepressants. Leah threw the pills down the toilet, so we went back and they gave us more.
By this time, my whole family was trying to get Leah the treatment she needed. My sister lives in San Marcos, Texas. She told us about a community mental health service there that takes anyone regardless of income or insurance. So, we headed for Texas. Once in Texas, Leah improved a lot. Leah worked in the bakery at a major super market for almost two years, never missing a day of work, often taking last minute shifts for other people. It was hard to think she was ill at this time. We were living with my two older sisters. My oldest sister has bi-polar disorder and with her moods, along with Leah's car breaking down, things began to unravel again.
Leah left home on foot in 90-100 degree temperatures. She returned home with blisters that no one in their right mind could walk on. Another time she left for four months and lived in a tent 20 miles from San Marcos. This was in the winter. She tried to hold onto a job at McDonald's. Her boss wanted to help her and encouraged her to go home. It rains often in the hill country in winter, and some nights Leah tried to sleep sitting up in a plastic tub. McDonald's had a truck stop close by with a bathroom. She was so tired she locked the bathroom door and went to sleep on the floor. The next morning, the truck stop manager told her, "If you ever sleep here again, I'll have you arrested." Leah's little encampment along side an I-35 access road was about a mile from the highway patrol office. They told her she had to move to a campground five miles away to be legal.
The fear that dug into every fiber of my being, was not knowing if my daughter was okay and, if she did come home, how would I protect her? My fear abated when a crisis intervention officer typed a letter on official police stationery saying that Leah was fragile, severely mentally ill, and needed to be held, if found, because she had to take medication.
When she did come home that spring, a judge signed an order that she was a danger to herself. Since then, she's been hospitalized twice. The second hospitalization was voluntary. She's been on many meds that make her worse. Sometimes she'd slap herself until her face was red and swollen. Sometimes, she'd come out of a trance and say, "Mommy, it's not me, it's the voices." I'd try to hold her hands, but she'd ask me to move away because "my hands will bite you."
Now Leah's on monthly shots of Invega and is doing better. It will be a year in November. I have a lot to be grateful for. Her treatment team includes me in everything. Leah is on Medicaid and I didn't have to beg for it. It took a year, but she received services for free, and Johnson & Johnson gave her the meds until Medicaid started.
We are a family working together to help Leah. She gets $470 a month from social security which is not enough to be independent. Young people with serious mental illnesses are handed a huge financial problem. If they can't work, they never get a chance to pay into social security.
Everyone says we are so fortunate here in San Marcos. I agree but we're also held hostage to a place where Leah can get help. San Marcos is away from home and expensive to live in. Half of our income goes to rent. Leah and I share a one bedroom apartment. The rent increases every year by $40. If we could afford to buy a car, I could work evenings but all my energy goes to my daughter.
We appreciate what we have, but I wonder what happened to all the promises for community services after de-institutionalization in 1955? I believe the federal government owes compensation to full-time caretakers who took over the job of hospital staff when they abandoned thousands of people and families. The cost of lives and unmitigated suffering is unknown by any records.
Photo credit: Jim Moon
A happy hippo. He's laughing. No, really, he's laughing!
Hope you have a good weekend everybody!
Frank's daughter, Carissa
September 22, 2017
The other day, I was talking to a police officer, a Sargent no less, in the Visalia, California Police Department. We were discussing my daughter who is diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. I was trying to explain to him the concept of treatment before tragedy. Of course, I didn't get anywhere with him.
What infuriated me was, when we were talking about the mentally ill in the community, he referred to people with schizophrenia as "skits". I didn't appreciate that. I thought it was insensitive, disrespectful, and callous. I would guess that this mentality exists in many police departments throughout the country. Maybe I'm being too sensitive but it really bothered me.
September 25, 2017
Just to follow up on what I wrote previously. I called the superior of the officer I spoke to and he said that referring to those with schizophrenia as "skits" was wrong and could be construed as a derogatory term. He added that the police department has some officers trained in how to deal with individuals with mental illness and offers Crisis Intervention Training (CIT). He said he would send an email alert to dispatchers regarding my daughter, and flag her file as someone with mental health issues. He asked me about her diagnosis. He was very cordial and I believe he took my concerns seriously.
Again, I explained that I was trying to be proactive to avoid any future tragedy involving the police and my daughter.
Sometimes a few words, said by someone you love, can unintentionally bring forth the most horrid of nightmares. My mother recently mentioned to me how my brother, who is struggling with mental illness, “knows something is wrong”. It was said with no real emotion or emphasis and the conversation quickly moved on, but I have not forgotten those words.
Does my brother truly sense that something is wrong? Is he trapped in some maze fighting to find a way out, a way to correct the trajectory of his life? Are his delusions and seemingly random actions his way of trying to get back to the life he remembers? When he could pick up the guitar and play all night or talk to my mother about anything, though usually it turned to politics until 2 in the morning? Does he remember these encounters or perhaps a sense of them?
I assumed they were lost to him like his love for basketball, like his love for hiking and his love of trying to hit me with tennis balls when my back was turned. I was more at ease when I thought of him wandering in a haze, focused on his delusions and writings with no real care of the past or what was lost. One can't lose something if they don't remember losing it in the first place. But, if he does remember, the pain of that loss is something I cannot comprehend.
My tears remind me how much I love him.
A poem my brother wrote for our mother
Photo credit: Marisa Farnsworth
A plethora of peonies
Hope you have a good weekend everybody!