• jeffw@lemmy.worldOP
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    6 months ago

    Deinstitutionalization is a good thing. The US lacks community treatment. We don’t need to go back to locking people up

    • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      What?? We desperately need mental health institutions back. No, we don’t need the romanticized victorian dungeons, but what we do need is an alternative to jails. Secure treatment facilities. We have… four, on the west coast. Two of which have at most ~160 beds. The priority waiting list for admission is decades long (no, that isnt an exaggeration) and there isn’t a non-priority waiting list. If you’re not a priority, you just go to jail!

      Community treatment is critical and we totally lack anything like it, but good god deinstitutionalization was one of the biggest public health and social equity diasters this country has ever had.

      • jeffw@lemmy.worldOP
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        6 months ago

        It was a failure because it was co-opted by the right (Reagan) and manipulated into a way to cut public health expenditures.

        The original idea, from the left and advocated for by people like JFK, was much different

        • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Deinstitutionalization was dreampt up by deluded idealists that slept with a copy of Naissance de la Clinique firmly lodged in their asses. Abolishing asylums was good, because at the time asylums were the aforesaid victorian dungeons. But from the outset, the movement was based on the belief that a magic pill would cure everything and all long term treatment was oppressive.

          Antipsychotics enabled community treatment at all. But the wholesale rejection of both long term and secure treatment facilities was an indefensible failure of reasoning and an abject tragedy, and one that was set in motion by Hoffman and his peers when they penned the foundational texts of the movement.

          We desperately need secure treatment facilities. There is no solution if we do not have them, just the continuing abject failure of basic human decency that we currently have. This system is broken, and it is directly the fault of everyone who began the deinstitutionalization movement and their total inability to foresee the obvious consequences of their actions. Regan was evil and JFK was understandably bitter, and even though they both worked to bring the end of asylums, they are both still guilty for their roles in bringing this current hell down on us.

    • FiniteBanjo
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      6 months ago

      Okay but a pipeline of funding care seems a lot better than criminalizing homeless people who exist as a result of deinstitutionalization.

      • jeffw@lemmy.worldOP
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        6 months ago

        Right. Thank you for repeating what I just said in simpler terms ig

        • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Anything to avoid talking about the elephant in the room, and what the hadiths and Koran say to do to homosexuals.

          No, instead we dance around it by talking about safe subjects like what Reagan did in the US.

          Yes please let’s talk about what a shitty US president did 44 years ago that impacted the US population instead of talking about what an Islamic military dictatorship did to a gay guy this week.

      • jeffw@lemmy.worldOP
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        6 months ago

        Deinstitutionalization has nothing to do with the lack of funding for mental health programs today. Two separate issues.

        • Nurse_Robot@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Actually, funding has a very large part to do with moving away from institutions. You’ll find money is behind most big decisions in this country. Not that I’m defending the hell that is institutions