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Mental Health Crises Require Professional Help, Not Police Presence
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Sponsor: The Autism Site
Police officers are not trained to handle mental health crises. Support federally funded mobile crisis response teams!
Life was unfairly cut short for Jeremy Mardis, 6 years old1; Daniel Prude, 41 years old2; Michelle Cusseaux, 50 years old3; Eric Parsa, 16 years old4. These Americans suffered from mental health crises and, when they were in their greatest time of need, were killed by police.
People with mental illnesses make up only one quarter of the United States population, but half of the population in prisons. They also make up one third of those killed by police5.
Studies show that over reliance on law enforcement in the United States (US) has resulted in an overrepresentation of persons with mental illness in instances of police violence, arrest, and incarceration6, 7.
As evidenced through several pilot programs, bringing a mental health professional as a first responder to situations involving mental health issues can help preserve individual and societal interests8.
With psychotherapeutic social services on site to interact with an individual first, the fear and agitation associated with police presence is often reduced. Problems involving mental health issues can frequently be deescalated and resolved, and police involvement can be reserved as backup9.
In the US, there is still extensive stigma around mental health issues, which contributes to violence against and incarceration of people with mental illnesses10.
Community-based mobile crisis intervention services lowering the rates of negative outcomes in interactions between police and individuals facing a mental health crisis, it also starts to address the root causes of these alarming statistics11.
Crisis teams make it possible for people to recognize alternatives to police involvement, and to realize mental illness events need not be treated with violence12.
The CAHOOTS Act (S.764), will ensure state Medicaid programs cover certain community-based mobile crisis intervention services for individuals experiencing a mental health or substance-use disorder crisis outside of a facility setting13.
Sign the petition and help support the CAHOOTS Act so that individuals experiencing a mental health or substance-use disorder crisis can avoid incarceration and get the help they need.