(State photo of Western State Hospital Lobby.)
(7-12-21) Are staff shortages at mental health hospitals in your state causing officials to stop admissions?
It’s happening in Virginia and it’s shameful.
The current crisis is related to staffing, but one of the contributing factors is the irresponsible actions of private hospitals. In 2014, the state passed a law in reaction to the horrific 2013 death of “Gus” Deeds, the son of state Sen. Creigh Deeds who rushed his son to a local mental health center only to be told no local state hospital beds were available. Gus attacked his father with a knife at home before taking his own life. Because of that incident, Virginia declared that state mental hospitals can not turn away anyone in crisis.
Unfortunately, greedy private hospital administrators have taken advantage of the law to empty their psychiatric wards to save money. Generally, psychiatric beds lose money. I heard of one incident where a hospital sent a psychiatric patient to the state hospital because she had an UTI and it simply wanted to get rid of her. As this article reprinted from The Washington Post shows, hospitals also do not want to deal with any psychiatric patient who is seen as threatening. Yet, because our state demands that an individual be threatening before they can be involuntarily admitted, hospitals can refuse to accept them.
Virginia orders 5 state mental hospitals to stop taking new admissions amid staffing crisis