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Home » News » National

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Mental illness tidal wave swamps New Orleans

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City's care system shrinking, coming undone

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  • New Orleans native Byron Turner, 39, became homeless because of Hurricane Katrina, and said his mental illness started because of the deadly storm. (Photograph by Rod Lamkey Jr. / The Washington Times)
  • Bobby Fisher, 23, like many others, lives in an abandoned building with a few friends. He said he misses his 2-year-old daughter and has attempted suicide after a bout of drinking. (Rod Lamkey Jr. / The Washington Times)
  • Jorether Jones remembers when her son, Herbert, was 2 years old. Mr. Jones (top photo), now 18, was detained June 11 by the New Orleans Crisis Unit for a knife incident at school. The police crisis unit administrator, who has been working with him for about three years, said, "He always has a knife; it's like his teddy bear." (Rod Lamkey Jr. / The Washington Times)
  • New Orleans Crisis Unit Technician Adam Graff III and trainee William McDermott walk Herbert Jones, 18, to the Crisis Unit van en route to LSU Hospital in New Orleans, La., Tuesday, June 9, 2009, after responding to a call for a knife incident at a school. Said Crisis Unit Administrator Cecile Tebo who was been working with him for about three years "He always has a knife, it's like his teddy bear." (Rod Lamkey Jr. / The Washington Times)
  • Dr. Kevin U. Stephens, the city's health director, said the system was functional before Katrina, but now, "We have no real significant inpatient capability and outpatient treatment is limited."
  • Astrid Riecken/The Washington Times
New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin has said the planned closure of the New Orleans Adolescent Hospital would "have the greatest negative impact on our poorest citizens."
  • Judge Arthur L. Hunter (Rod Lamkey Jr. / The Washington Times)
  • Nearly four years after Hurricane Katrina laid waste to the Gulf Coast region, Charity Hospital remains closed.
  • Photographs by Rod Lamkey Jr./The Washington Times
Dr. Jullette Saussy, director of emergency medical services in New Orleans, has to deal with a health infrastructure that was decimated in the aftermath of Katrina.
  • Adam Graff III (right) and William McDermott are members of the New Orleans Police Crisis Unit, the only one of its kind in the nation, which transports mental patients to hospitals.
  • Photographs by Rod Lamkey Jr./The Washington Times
Unity of Greater New Orleans social workers Mike Miller and Shamus Rohn are the last search and rescue team operating in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. They search abandoned buildings looking for the homeless and homeless with mental illnesses to offer food, housing and medical help. The shortage of mental health care will become even more acute when New Orleans Adolescent Hospital (NOAH) closes its doors on Sept. 1. It is the city's only public hospital still providing inpatient services for the mentally ill.
  • Trailers at University Hospital in New Orleans are used to treat patients with mental illness. Cecile Tebo, crisis unit administrator, described the situation as "a really bad zoo."

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By Audrey Hudson

Second of three parts.

NEW ORLEANS

A mental health crisis that has swamped this city's care facilities as surely as Hurricane Katrina's floodwaters washed over the Lower 9th Ward is about to become even worse, care providers say.

New Orleans already is struggling with fewer than half of the inpatient beds for the mentally ill that it had before the 2005 hurricane - even as suicide rates and the number of people with mental health problems have doubled.

That shortage is about to become even more acute with the scheduled closing Sept. 1 of the New Orleans Adolescent Hospital (NOAH), the city's only public hospital still providing inpatient services for the mentally ill.

The closure, designed to trim $14 million from the state's 2010 budget, will leave New Orleans with 133 beds for mental health inpatient care and will make the city jail - with 60 of those beds - the city's largest psychiatric ward.

• Click here to visit the interactive Web site accompanying this series of articles about New Orleans' struggles with mental illness post-Katrina.

Before Katrina, "We had a functional system, not a Rolls-Royce, but we managed to treat patients," said Dr. Kevin U. Stephens, director of health for the city of New Orleans.

TWT RELATED STORY:
• Mentally ill struggle in post-Katrina New Orleans

State funding for mental health services has risen steadily since the storm, from $37.4 million in 2006 to $74.4 million this year. Even so, Dr. Stephens said, "We have no real significant inpatient capability, and outpatient treatment is limited."

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