On December 8, 2010, Jack Dalrymple, a Republican Governor in the safely Republican state of North Dakota, sent a budget to the state Legislative Assembly calling for an $8 million increase in funding for mental health services.
His transmittal message accompanying his FY2011-2013 proposed budget was simple. “We… need to make investments that help take care of people. We have all been alarmed recently about teen suicide rates, especially on our Native American reservations. These highlight the need to make more resources available for critical mental health services for our citizens.”
So, in a $3.3 billion general fund budget, he proposed over $6 million for new inpatient services, community crisis stabilization, and drug dependency treatment. He also proposed $1 million for suicide prevention, another million dollars for mental health services on college and high school campuses, and a rate increase for mental health providers.
He summed up these requests by saying that “the physical and mental health of our citizens is always a top priority.”
The North Dakota Legislature apparently agrees. According to a recent report of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, the state has made up for historically low spending on mental health services over the past three years by topping the nation in increasing spending for mental health.
As overall state mental health spending in the nation declined by $1.6 billion, North Dakota increased spending for mental health by 48.1%.
In the same time frame, South Carolina, Alabama, Alaska, and Illinois all cut mental health spending by over 30%, and Nevada, the District of Columbia, and California all cut it by over 20%. In fact, most of the rest of the country is clearly out of step with North Dakota.
A Bloomberg News article headline this past week made clear what cuts to mental health mean: “Mental Health Cuts by U.S. States Risk Boosting Health Costs.” The reason, as one Illinois emergency room physician pointed out, is that sick patients don’t just disappear when they are denied one set of services. They seek out another, often more costly, alternative.
In the case of people denied mental health care, it is usually the hospital.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there were 2.4 million primary diagnoses of mental illness in general hospitals in 2006. In the same year, state mental health spending totaled $104 per capita, according to Kaiser Family Foundation State Health Facts data.
CDC recently released new data for 2009. In that year, the number of primary mental illness diagnoses decreased to under 1.6 million. But the State Health facts data reported that state mental health spending had increased by then to $123 per capita.
In other words, during a time frame when state mental health agency funding increased by 18%, mental health diagnoses in general hospitals decreasedby 35%.
These are the facts, and there is an association here, at least for the most recent three-year period for which we have data. When states spend more on mental health as they did in 2009, fewer people with mental illness need hospitals for care. And when states spend less on mental health, as they did in 2006, hospital use goes up.
Now that they have the facts, what are states proposing this year?
- The Florida Senate has proposed to reduce adult mental health services funding by 34%. The House saved Florida from such a spending disaster last year; it will have to do so again this year.
- Connecticut’s Governor has proposed a $12 million cut to the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services from the state’s already-approved FY2013 budget.
- Alabama last week announced plans to close 4 psychiatric hospitals.
- Illinois has proposed cuttingtwo psychiatric hospitals and a host of community health centers throughout Chicago.
- Mississippi is proposing a 5% cut to mental health that could result in the closing of six mental health facilities throughout the state.
- The Pennsylvania Governor’s newly proposed budget will cut Philadelphia by $42 million in mostly mental health and addiction services funding, according to information provided by the Mental Health Association in Pennsylvania.
Do you detect a pattern here?
Proponents argue that these cuts are being made in the name of fiscal responsibility, but they don't have the vision to see the forest beyond the trees. Every one of them will make people sicker, state costs higher, and an already bad situation worse.
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