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Grand Jury Rips Florida’s Mental Health System, Citing ‘Deficiencies in Funding, Leadership and Services’

December 11, 2020 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

Add to the list: a shoddy mental health system. The slide was shown at a suicide-prevention town hall in palm Coast last year. (© FlaglerLive)
Add to the list: a shoddy mental health system. The slide was shown at a suicide-prevention town hall in palm Coast last year. (© FlaglerLive)

A statewide grand jury studying school safety issued an interim report Thursday that tore into Florida’s mental-health system, saying that “deficiencies in funding, leadership and services related to mental health care tend to turn up everywhere like bad pennies.”




“This grand jury has received a great deal of evidence and testimony regarding financial deficiencies, conflicts between various agencies over information sharing and privacy, inadequate or inefficient provision of services and a number of other serious problems,” the report said. “To put it bluntly, our mental health care ‘system’ — if one can even call it that — is a mess, and we have formulated a spate of recommendations for straightforward improvement and further study in this critical area.”

The 27-page document posted late Thursday afternoon on the Florida Supreme Court website was the third interim report issued by the grand jury, which the court impaneled in February 2019 at the request of Gov. Ron DeSantis. The request came a year after a gunman killed 17 students and faculty members at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.

While the interim report Thursday addressed several issues, it focused most heavily on what the grand jury saw as problems in the mental-health system. The accused Parkland shooter Nikolas Cruz, a former Marjory Stoneman Douglas student, had received treatment for mental-health issues — leading to scrutiny of the mental-health system.

The grand jury said in the report that it is “clear to us that inadequately addressed mental health issues have the peculiar potential to spiral out over time into criminal acts and violent behavior resulting in serious injury and loss of life.”




While acknowledging that “these are hard problems,” the report described a disjointed, under-funded system and called on the Legislature to form a commission to study mental-health services. It suggested that such a commission could be similar to a panel known as the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Commission, which the Legislature formed after the 2018 shooting to investigate school safety and make recommendations.

“It should be apparent to any reader of this report that this grand jury has only scratched the surface of the myriad difficulties involved in comprehensively addressing the sad state of mental health care services in the state of Florida,” the report said. “While a comprehensive examination of this system would lie within our jurisdiction, it would take more time than we have at our disposal considering the other items the governor has also placed in our mandate. For this reason, it is the opinion of this grand jury that the Florida Legislature should appoint a commission to specifically examine the provision of mental health services in the state of Florida.”

The report also pointed to funding as an issue, saying Florida provides less money per-capita than any other state for mental-health care and treatment.

“Even among states that do not collect income taxes, Florida is dead last,” the report said. “It is therefore important to highlight from the outset that correcting the deficiencies in our system of mental health care will require additional funding, but the Legislature must make this financial commitment intelligently so as to ensure that whatever funds it does provide are not wasted.”

Also, the grand jury said the provision of mental-health services is “spread out over state, federal and local agencies, each with different missions, priorities, metrics and definitions of success, making for treatment ‘plans’ that are unfocused, inconstant and often ineffective at the individual level.”

“Concerns about compliance with state and federal privacy statutes often prevent effective interagency cooperation,” the report said. “Because each agency cannot see the ‘big picture’ of a person’s complete mental health history, there is no real way to develop or carry out any kind of a comprehensive plan for treatment and follow-up services.”

–Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida

The Grand Jury Report:

Click to access mental-health-grand-jury.pdf

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. mark101 says

    December 12, 2020 at 10:38 am

    Well if you go research other states, most have issues of handling mental health. CA is also not immune. ex. More than 4,000 Kaiser Permanente mental health professionals in California launched a five-day strike on Monday at Kaiser facilities across the state.”We’re striking because the problems that plague Kaiser’s mental health system keep getting worse,” said Kenneth Rogers, a Kaiser psychologist, in a statement.”. Fl like all the states need to step up and do whats right for these families and individuals, but of course it all comes down to whose going to pay for it and where does the money come from, typical

  2. BIG Neighbor says

    December 14, 2020 at 6:57 am

    How can we stand by and watch the attacks against social media gain traction as a consequence of people getting banned from twitter when along we know for a fact the toxic tragedy in all this is the costs in terms of our wayward youth, lost in the collateral damage of addiction and suicide? What good are access and learning plans when youth are distracted by the emotional turbulence in friends and family, stirred by the toxic clouding that has recent media trending so profitable and information so rare? It makes me cringe to wonder how many children get harassed at home or on line when they try to embrace new values of diversity and inclusion being promoted at school.

  3. Bambi says

    December 14, 2020 at 3:08 pm

    Unfortunately we keep electing mentally ill leaders that make these decisions as to where to send resources.

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