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Extraído del Informe Consolidado

Esta investigación fue publicada originalmente como parte de un informe consolidado más amplio que contiene múltiples investigaciones. Consulte el PDF consolidado para ver el documento completo.

Orange County Grand Jury • 2014-2015

The Mental Illness Revolving Door: a Problem for Police, Hospitals, and the Health Care Agency Superior Court. The

Published: June 25, 2015 56 pages Consolidated Report
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Findings 14 findings

F1
Deputy Sheriffs and police officers receive insufficient training on how to evaluate and handle the mentally ill in the field.
F2
Deputy Sheriffs and police officers receive insufficient training regarding Laura’s Law.
F3
Orange County’s Centralized Assessment Team is inadequate in that it takes too long for them to respond to the scene to assist police officers in their evaluations of the mentally ill.
F4
Orange County’s mental illness triage system is inadequate in that there are no field screening protocols that would allow medical clearance in the field by law enforcement personnel or paramedics.
F5
Orange County’s mental illness triage system is inadequate in that the police agencies either do not have a triage desk to advise and assist officers in the field or do not have psychiatric crisis mobile response teams at their disposal.
F6
Orange County’s Psychiatric Evaluation and Response Team clinicians are insufficient in number to meet the needs of police agencies in Orange County.
F7
Orange County’s Evaluation and Treatment Services facility is inadequate in that its capacity is insufficient to permit police officers to take all the mentally ill to it and drop them off at the facility, instead of transporting the patient to a hospital emergency room.
F8
Orange County’s Evaluation and Treatment Service facility is inadequate in that the County does not permit medical triage or medical clearance in the field, and therefore directs police officers to obtain medical screening for even minor health conditions that could easily be treated at the facility.
F9
Orange County’s Evaluation and Treatment Service facility is inadequate in that it directs police officers to take the mentally ill who may be under the influence of alcohol or drugs to a hospital emergency room rather than to a psychiatric emergency facility.
F10
Orange County’s crisis intervention system is inadequate in that there is only one Evaluation and Treatment Service facility for the entire County.
F11
The County’s crisis intervention system is inadequate in that it does not provide strategically located, stand-alone, drop-off psychiatric emergency stabilization facilities with medical treatment capability at convenient locations throughout the County.
F12
The County’s crisis intervention system is inadequate in that there is no real-time, empty-bed registry to enable officers and clinicians in the field to determine bed- availability at the Evaluation and Treatment Service facility and at designated hospitals.
F13
The County’s crisis intervention system is inadequate in that there is no 5150, case management, and conservatorship database in place to assist officers and clinicians in the field to triage the mentally ill who do not qualify for a 5150 hold.
F14
The Health Care Agency has not established benchmarks and a complete performance-measurement system with which to track the success and cost effectiveness of Laura’s law, as directed by the Board of Supervisors in May 2014. RECOMMENDATIONS In accordance with California Penal Code sections 933 and 933.05, the 2014- 2015 Grand Jury requires (or, as noted, requests) responses from each agency affected by the recommendations presented in this section. The responses are to be submitted to the Presiding Judge of the Superior Court. Based on its investigation titled “The Mental Illness Revolving Door: A Problem for Police, Hospitals, and the Health Care Agency,” the 2014-2015 Orange County Grand Jury makes the following 14 recommendations:

Recommendations 14