The Newtown shootings have focused national attention not just on the need for increased gun control, but also on a lack of access to mental health care. But the discussion comes at a time when lawmakers negotiating over a budget deal are mulling major cuts to programs that fund mental health services. And if they don’t act, the result could be even worse.
It’s not known for certain that Adam Lanza, who last Friday killed 20 children and 7 adults, as well as himself, was mentally ill, though reports have presented a picture of a deeply troubled young man. And already, public officials and lawmakers from both parties have stressed the need to strengthen mental health services and reporting in the wake of Lanza’s rampage.
“We’re gonna need to work on making access to mental health care at least as easy as access to a gun,” Obama said at a press conference Wednesday, announcing a task force to reduce gun violence.
But while that conversation is playing out, funding for mental health services could be in jeopardy. In continuing discussions over the fiscal cliff, Obama and Speaker John Boehner are considering long-term cuts to Medicaid, which underwrites services for more than 60 percent of people in the public mental health system, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. And that’s on top of over $4 billion in cuts already weathered in response to the recent economic downturn and state budget crunch.
Mental-health advocates say the result could be disastrous.
“We already know that people who need help aren’t getting it,” Sarah Steverman, Director of State Policy for Mental Health America told msnbc. “As there’s a decrease in coverage or a decrease in providers, the longer people have to wait for appointments, the less likely they are to go. And then they’re less likely to get the help that they need. It’s always been a problem, and I think we’ll see an even bigger problem if we do have cuts to Medicaid.”
But a failure to reach a deal could be even worse. In that case, a series of automatic budget cuts known as sequestration will take effect. According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, that’ll mean an 8 percent cut to resources that the mentally ill depend on, including special education, supportive housing grants, and mental health research.
“The fiscal cliff offers a fair amount of danger” Mike Fitzpatrick, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness told msnbc, especially coming on the heels of those other cutbacks. “At a time when entire state hospitals have been closed, in-patient beds have been shut down, and hospitals are reducing the size of their programs, it’s on the community system to rebuild itself,”









